SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Jean-Marc
Richard
Appellant
and
Time
Inc. and Time Consumer Marketing Inc.
Respondents
Official English Translation
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and
Cromwell JJ.
Joint
Reasons for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 217)
|
LeBel and Cromwell JJ. (McLachlin C.J.
and Deschamps, Fish, Abella and Charron JJ. concurring)
|
Richard v. Time Inc., 2012 SCC 8, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 265
Jean‑Marc
Richard Appellant
v.
Time Inc. and
Time Consumer Marketing Inc. Respondents
Indexed as: Richard v. Time Inc.
2012 SCC 8
File No.: 33554.
2011: January 18; 2012: February 28.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella,
Charron and Cromwell JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Consumer protection — Prohibited business
practices — False or misleading representations — Court of Appeal finding that
merchant’s representations would not mislead consumer “with average level of
intelligence, scepticism and curiosity” — Test for determining whether general
impression given by representation constitutes prohibited practice — Consumer
Protection Act, R.S.Q., c. P‑40.1, ss. 218, 219, 228, 238(c).
Consumer protection — Prohibited business
practices — Recourses — Conditions for exercising recourses — Conditions that
apply where consumer seeks, under s. 272 of Consumer Protection Act, to
have court sanction violations of Title II of that Act — Consumer
Protection Act, R.S.Q., c. P‑40.1, ss. 2, 253, 272.
Consumer protection — Prohibited business
practices — Recourses — Consumer seeking compensatory and punitive damages
under s. 272 of Consumer Protection Act — Conditions for awarding damages and
criteria for determining their quantum — Consumer Protection Act, R.S.Q.,
c. P‑40.1, s. 272 — Civil Code of Québec, S.Q. 1991, c. 64,
art. 1621.
In
his mail, R received an “Official Sweepstakes Notification” (the “Document”) in
the form of a letter supposedly signed by the manager responsible for the
sweepstakes. Along the edge of the letter were boxes printed in colour, some
of which, because they referred to Time magazine, could lead the
recipient to infer that it was from T and TCM. In the Document, which was
written in English only, several exclamatory sentences in bold uppercase
letters, whose purpose was to catch the reader’s attention by suggesting that
he or she had won a cash prize of US$833,337, were combined with conditional
clauses in smaller print, some of which began with the words “If you have and
return the Grand Prize winning entry in time”. In addition, the back side of
the letter informed R that he would qualify for a $100,000 bonus prize if
he validated his entry within five days. The mailing also contained a reply
coupon and a return envelope on which the official rules of the sweepstakes
appeared in small print. The reply coupon also offered R the possibility of
subscribing to Time magazine. As well, the rules stated that a winning
number had been pre‑selected by computer and that the holder of that
number could receive the grand prize only if the reply coupon was returned by
the deadline. If the holder of the pre‑selected winning number did not
return the reply coupon, the rules explained, the grand prize winner would be
selected by random drawing among all eligible entries, that is, everyone who
had returned the reply coupon, and each participant’s odds of winning would
then be 1:120 million. Convinced that he was about to receive the
promised amount, R immediately returned the reply coupon that was in the
envelope. In doing so, he also subscribed to Time magazine. R began
regularly receiving issues of the magazine a short time later, but the cheque
he was expecting was a long time coming. He contacted T and TCM, which
informed him that he would not be receiving a cheque, because the Document had
not contained the winning entry for the draw and was merely an invitation to
participate in a sweepstakes. They also informed him that the manager who had
signed the letter did not exist; the name was merely a “pen name”.
R
filed a motion to institute proceedings in which he asked the Quebec Superior
Court to declare him to be the winner of the cash prize mentioned in the
Document and to order T and TCM to pay compensatory and punitive damages
corresponding to the value of the grand prize. The Superior Court allowed the
action in part. It held that the Document contravened Title II of
the Consumer Protection Act (“C.P.A.”) on prohibited business
practices and that the civil sanctions provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
were accordingly available. The judge set the value of the moral injuries
suffered by R at $1,000 and fixed the quantum of punitive damages that
were also awarded to him at $100,000.
The
Court of Appeal allowed the appeal of T and TCM and concluded that they had not
violated the C.P.A. First, T and TCM had not violated s. 228 C.P.A.
by failing to indicate clearly in the Document that R might not be the grand
prize winner. Moreover, using the name of a fictitious person as the signer of
the Document did not contravene s. 238(c) C.P.A., since it
did not have the potential to mislead consumers about the merchant’s identity.
Finally, there were no false or misleading representations in the Document, as
it would not mislead a consumer “with an average level of intelligence,
scepticism and curiosity”. The Court of Appeal set aside the award of
compensatory and punitive damages.
Held:
The appeal should be allowed in part.
Per
McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Cromwell JJ.:
The analytical approach chosen by the Court of Appeal for establishing the
general impression conveyed by the advertisement of T and TCM was inconsistent
with the test adopted by the legislature. According to s. 218 C.P.A.,
which guides the application of all the provisions of Title II concerning
prohibited business practices, to determine whether a representation
constitutes such a practice, it is necessary to consider the “general
impression” given by the representation and, where appropriate, the “literal
meaning” of the words used in it. In the case of false or misleading
advertising, the general impression is the one a person has after an initial
contact with the entire advertisement, and it relates to both the layout of the
advertisement and the meaning of the words used. It is analysed without considering
the personal attributes of the consumer who has instituted proceedings against
the merchant. To be consistent with the legislature’s objective of protecting
vulnerable persons from the dangers of certain advertising techniques, the
general impression test must be applied from the perspective of the average
consumer, who is credulous and inexperienced and takes no more than ordinary
care to observe that which is staring him or her in the face upon first
entering into contact with an entire advertisement. Considerable importance
must be attached not only to the text, but also to the entire context,
including the way the text is displayed to the consumer. Defining the average
consumer as having “an average level of intelligence, scepticism and curiosity”
is inconsistent with the letter and the spirit of s. 218 C.P.A. A
court asked to assess the veracity of a commercial representation must engage,
under s. 218 C.P.A., in a two‑step analysis that involves —
having regard, where appropriate, to the literal meaning of the words used by
the merchant — (1) describing the general impression that the
representation is likely to convey to a credulous and inexperienced consumer;
and (2) determining whether that general impression is true to reality.
If the answer at the second step is no, the merchant has engaged in a
prohibited practice.
In
this case, the average consumer, after first reading the Document, would have
been under the general impression that R held the winning entry and had only to
return the reply coupon to initiate the claim process. The Document’s strange
collection of affirmations and restrictions was not clear or intelligible
enough to dispel the general impression conveyed by the most prominent
sentences. Even if it did not necessarily contain any statements that were
actually false, the fact remains that it was riddled with misleading
representations within the meaning of s. 219 C.P.A. Furthermore,
the contest rules were not all apparent to someone reading the Document for the
first time. These are important facts that T and TCM were required to
mention. As a result, T and TCM also violated s. 228 C.P.A.
However, the use by T and TCM of a “pen name” in their advertising material did
not amount to a violation of s. 238(c) of the C.P.A., as the
Document contained no false representations concerning their status or
identity. It can be understood from a single reading that the Document was from
them and that they did not claim to have a particular status or identity that
they did not actually have.
Subject
to the other recourses provided for in the C.P.A., a consumer can
institute proceedings under s. 272 C.P.A. to have the court
sanction a failure by a merchant or a manufacturer to fulfil an obligation
imposed on the merchant or manufacturer by the C.P.A., by the
regulations made under the C.P.A. or by a voluntary undertaking. Where
a merchant or a manufacturer fails to fulfil an obligation to which s. 272
C.P.A. applies, the consumer can claim a contractual remedy,
compensatory damages and punitive damages, or just one of those remedies. It
will then be up to the trial judge to award the remedies he or she considers
appropriate in the circumstances. However, the sanction available under
s. 272 for failing to fulfil an obligation must be imposed in accordance
with the principles governing the application of the C.P.A. and, where
applicable, the rules of the general law. In particular, legal interest under
that provision depends on the existence of a contract to which the Act applies,
since s. 2 C.P.A. establishes the basic principle that a consumer
contract must exist for the Act to apply, except in the specific case of the
penal provisions. The recourse is therefore available only to natural persons
who have entered into a contract governed by the Act with a merchant or a
manufacturer.
The
presumption of fraud provided for in s. 253 C.P.A. does not delimit
the scope of s. 272 C.P.A. or govern the principles that underlie
the application of that section. Rather, it provides consumers with additional
protection in situations in which they do not wish or are not able to exercise
a recourse under s. 272 C.P.A. Similarly, s. 217 C.P.A.,
which provides that the fact that a prohibited practice has been used is not
subordinate to whether or not a contract has been made, is not intended to
govern the conditions under which the recourses provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
are available and can be exercised. It relates only to the existence of a
prohibited practice and authorizes the Director of Criminal and Penal
Prosecutions to enforce the Act on a preventive basis, in keeping with the
legislature’s intention.
For
the contractual remedies provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. to be
available, a consumer does not have to prove fraud and its consequences on the
basis of the ordinary rules of the civil law, since, given the influence that
prohibited practices can have on a consumer’s decision to enter into a
contractual relationship with a merchant, a prohibited practice in itself
constitutes fraud within the meaning of art. 1401 of the Civil Code of
Quebec (“C.C.Q.”). As well, a merchant or manufacturer who is sued
cannot raise a defence based on “fraud that has been uncovered and is not
prejudicial”. The recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. is based
on the premise that any failure to fulfil an obligation imposed by the Act
gives rise to an absolute presumption of prejudice to the consumer. Proof that
one of the statutory contractual obligations that are set out primarily in
Title I of the Act has been violated entitles a consumer, without having
to meet any additional requirements, to obtain one of the contractual remedies
provided for in s. 272. A consumer who wishes to benefit from this
presumption in order to have a court sanction the use by a merchant or a
manufacturer of practices prohibited by Title II of the Act must prove the
following: (1) that the merchant or manufacturer failed to fulfil one of
the obligations imposed by Title II of the Act; (2) that the consumer
saw the representation that constituted a prohibited practice; (3) that
the consumer’s seeing that representation resulted in the formation, amendment
or performance of a consumer contract; and (4) that a sufficient nexus
existed between the content of the representation and the goods or services
covered by the contract. This last requirement means that the prohibited
practice must be one that was capable of influencing a consumer’s behaviour
with respect to the formation, amendment or performance of the contract. Where
these four requirements are met, the contract so formed, amended or performed
constitutes, in itself, a prejudice suffered by the consumer, and the consumer
is entitled to demand one of the contractual remedies provided for in
s. 272 C.P.A.
The
recourse in damages provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. is not dependent
on the specific contractual remedies set out in s. 272(a) to (f).
It must nevertheless be exercised in accordance with the rule concerning the
legal interest required to institute proceedings under s. 272 and is
subject to the general rules of Quebec civil law. In addition, a claim for
extracontractual compensatory damages is available, since fraud committed
during the pre‑contractual phase is a civil fault that can give rise to
extracontractual liability. Where the recourse in damages provided for in
s. 272 C.P.A. is available to a consumer, his or her burden of
proof is therefore eased, regardless of whether the recourse is contractual or
extracontractual in nature, because of the absolute presumption of prejudice
that results from any unlawful act committed by the merchant or manufacturer.
This presumption means that the consumer does not have to prove that the
merchant intended to mislead. A consumer to whom the irrebuttable presumption
of prejudice applies has also succeeded in proving the fault of the merchant or
manufacturer for the purposes of s. 272 C.P.A.
In
this case, R has discharged his burden of proving a sufficient nexus between
the prohibited practices engaged in by T and TCM and his subscription contract
with them. R subscribed to Time magazine after reading the
documentation T and TCM had sent him, and the trial judge found that he would
not have subscribed to the magazine had he not read the misleading
documentation. As a result, the Document is deemed to have had a fraudulent
effect on R’s decision to subscribe to Time magazine. The conduct of T
and TCM that is in issue constitutes a civil fault that triggers their
extracontractual liability.
There
is no reason to interfere with the trial judge’s finding that the fault of T
and TCM caused moral injuries to R or with her award of $1,000 for those
injuries. T and TCM have not shown that she erred in assessing the evidence or
in applying the legal principles with regard either to their liability or to
the quantum of damages.
Furthermore,
consumers can be awarded punitive damages under s. 272 C.P.A. even
if they are not awarded contractual remedies or compensatory damages at the
same time. Because s. 272 C.P.A. establishes no criteria or rules
for awarding punitive damages, such damages must be awarded in accordance with art. 1621
C.C.Q. and must have a preventive objective, that is, to discourage the
repetition of undesirable conduct. The award must also be consistent with the
objectives of the C.P.A., namely to restore the balance in the
contractual relationship between merchants and consumers and to eliminate
unfair and misleading practices. Violations by merchants or manufacturers that
are intentional, malicious or vexatious, and conduct on their part in which
they display ignorance, carelessness or serious negligence with respect to
their obligations and consumers’ rights under the C.P.A. may result in
awards of punitive damages. However, before awarding such damages, the court
must consider the whole of the merchant’s conduct at the time of and after the
violations.
An
award of punitive damages was justified in this case, but the amount of $100,000
awarded by the trial judge should be varied. Although the trial judge did not
err in finding that T and TCM had sent many mailings in Quebec to a large
number of consumers and that these promotional sweepstakes had enabled them to
sell many new subscriptions, she did err in considering the Charter of the
French language and the patrimonial situation of T and TCM when
assessing the appropriate quantum of punitive damages. T and TCM had
intentionally violated the C.P.A. in a calculated manner in this case,
and that violation was capable of affecting a large number of consumers,
whereas nothing in the evidence indicates that, after R complained, T and TCM
took corrective action to make their advertising clear or consistent with the
letter and spirit of the C.P.A. This is an aggravating factor. On the
other hand, the impact on R of the fault committed by T and TCM remains quite
limited, though, it is true, not negligible, and R’s attitude contributed to
the proportions this case has ultimately assumed. Nevertheless, the fact that
the amount of the award of compensatory damages is small favours awarding a
significant amount of punitive damages. An amount of $15,000 suffices in the
circumstances to fulfil the preventive purpose of punitive damages, underlines
the gravity of the violations of the Act and sanctions the conduct of T and TCM
in a manner that is serious enough to induce them to cease the prohibited
practices in which they have been engaging, if they have not already done so.
Costs
in the Superior Court and the Court of Appeal will be taxed in accordance with
the tariffs applicable in those courts. However, R will have his costs in the
Supreme Court of Canada on a solicitor and client basis because of the
importance of the issues of law he raised.
Cases Cited
Distinguished:
Hill v. Church of Scientology of Toronto, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 1130; Vorvis
v. Insurance Corporation of British Columbia, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1085; Whiten
v. Pilot Insurance Co., 2002 SCC 18, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 595; approved: Nichols
v. Toyota Drummondville (1982) inc., [1995] R.J.Q. 746; Québec
(Procureur général) v. Distribution Canovex Inc., [1996] J.Q. no 5302
(QL); Option Consommateurs v. Brick Warehouse, l.p., 2011 QCCS 569
(CanLII); Tremblay v. Ameublements Tanguay inc., 2011 QCCS 3078
(CanLII); Turgeon v. Germain Pelletier Ltée, [2001] R.J.Q. 291; Beauchamp
v. Relais Toyota inc., [1995] R.J.Q. 741; Lambert v. Minerve Canada,
compagnie de transport aérien inc., [1998] R.J.Q. 1740; disapproved: Ata
v. 9118‑8169 Québec Inc., 2006 QCCS 3777, [2006] R.J.Q. 1883; Lafontaine
v. La Source d’eau Val‑d’Or inc., 2001 CanLII 10566; Jabraian v.
Trévi Fabrication Inc., 2005 CanLII 10580; Santangeli v. 154995 Canada
Inc., 2005 CanLII 32103; Martin v. Rénovations métropolitaines (Québec) ltée, 2006 QCCQ 1760 (CanLII); Darveau
v. 9034‑9770 Québec inc., 2005 CanLII 41136; considered: Riendeau
v. Brault & Martineau inc., 2007 QCCS 4603, [2007] R.J.Q. 2620, aff’d
2010 QCCA 366, [2010] R.J.Q. 507; referred to: Prebushewski
v. Dodge City Auto (1984) Ltd., 2005 SCC 28, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 649; R. v.
Colgate‑Palmolive Ltd., [1970] 1 C.C.C. 100; Veuve Clicquot
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Inc. v. Alavida Lifestyles Inc., 2011 SCC 27, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 387; Mattel,
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Imperial Tobacco Products Ltd., [1971] 5 W.W.R. 409; P.G. du Québec v.
Louis Bédard Inc., 1986 CarswellQue 981; Adams v. Amex Bank of Canada,
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QCCS 2764 (CanLII); Marcotte v. Fédération des caisses Desjardins du Québec,
2009 QCCS 2743 (CanLII); Chrysler Canada Ltée v. Poulin, 1988 CanLII
1001; A.C.E.F. Sud‑Ouest de Montréal v. Arrangements alternatifs de
crédit du Québec Inc., [1994] R.J.Q. 114; Centre d’économie en chauffage
Turcotte inc. v. Ferland, [2003] J.Q. no 18096 (QL); 9029‑4596
Québec inc. v. Duplantie, [1999] R.J.Q. 3059; Boissonneault v. Banque de
Montréal, [1988] R.J.Q. 2622; Service aux marchands détaillants ltée
(Household Finance) v. Option Consommateurs, 2006 QCCA 1319 (CanLII); Chartier
v. Meubles Léon ltée, 2003 CanLII 7749; Kingsway Financial Services Inc.
v. 118997 Canada inc., 1999 CanLII 13530; Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002
SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235; H.L. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 SCC
25, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 401; de Montigny v. Brossard (Succession), 2010 SCC
51, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 64; Béliveau St‑Jacques v. Fédération des
employées et employés de services publics inc., [1996] 2 S.C.R. 345; Gastonguay
v. Entreprises D. L. Paysagiste, 2004 CanLII 31925; Mathurin
v. 3086‑9069 Québec Inc., 2003 CanLII 19131; Systèmes Techno‑Pompes
inc. v. Tremblay, 2006 QCCA 987, [2006] R.J.Q. 1791; Champagne v.
Toitures Couture et Associés inc., [2002] R.J.Q. 2863; Quebec (Public
Curator) v. Syndicat national des employés de l’hôpital St‑Ferdinand,
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 211; Landry v. Quesnel, [2002] R.J.Q. 80; Provigo
Distribution inc. v. Supermarché A.R.G. inc., 1997 CanLII 10209; Genex
Communications inc. v. Association québécoise de l’industrie du disque, du
spectacle et de la vidéo, 2009 QCCA 2201, [2009] R.J.Q. 2743; Fondation
québécoise du cancer v. Patenaude, 2006 QCCA 1554, [2007] R.R.A. 5; Voltec
ltée v. CJMF FM ltée, [2002] R.R.A. 1078; Procureur général du Québec v.
Boisclair, [2001] R.J.Q. 2449; Augustus v. Gosset, [1996] 3 S.C.R.
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Québec, 2004 SCC 36, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 17.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act respecting access to documents held by public bodies and the
protection of personal information, R.S.Q.,
c. A‑2.1, s. 167.
Act respecting prearranged funeral services and sepultures, R.S.Q., c. A-23.001, s. 56.
Charter of human rights and freedoms,
R.S.Q., c. C-12, s. 49.
Charter of the French language, R.S.Q.,
c. C‑11.
Civil Code of Québec, S.Q. 1991,
c. 64, art. 1386, 1387, 1388, 1401, 1407, 1412, 1621, 1899, 1902,
1968.
Combines Investigation Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c. C-23, s. 52(4) .
Competition Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-34,
s. 52(4) .
Consumer Protection Act, R.S.Q.,
c. P-40.1, ss. 1(e), 2, 6.1, Title I, 8, 9, 54.1, Title II,
216, 217, 218, 219, 220 to 251, 228, 238, 253, Title IV, 261, 262, 271,
272, 277, 290, 310, 314, 316.
Consumer Protection Act, S.Q. 1971,
c. 74.
Petroleum Products Act, R.S.Q., c. P-30.01,
s. 67.
Trade‑marks Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c. T-13 .
Tree Protection Act, R.S.Q., c. P-37,
s. 1.
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APPEAL
from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal (Chamberland, Morin and
Rochon JJ.A.), 2009 QCCA 2378, [2010] R.J.Q. 3, SOQUIJ AZ-50590237, [2009]
J.Q. no 15288 (QL), 2009 CarswellQue 12570, reversing a
decision of Cohen J., 2007 QCCS 3390, [2007] R.J.Q. 2008, SOQUIJ AZ-50442262,
[2007] Q.J. No. 7531 (QL), 2007 CarswellQue 6654. Appeal allowed in part.
Hubert Sibre, Annie
Claude Beauchemin and Jean‑Yves Fortin, for the appellant.
Pascale Cloutier and
Fadi Amine, for the respondents.
English version of
the judgment of the Court delivered by
LeBel and Cromwell JJ. —
I.
Introduction
[1]
This appeal arises out of an advertising
campaign that undoubtedly did not turn out as intended. The central issues in
the case are whether the respondents, by mailing a document entitled “Official
Sweepstakes Notification” (the “Document”) to the appellant, engaged in a
practice prohibited by the Consumer Protection Act, R.S.Q., c. P‑40.1
(“C.P.A.”), and, if so, whether the appellant is entitled to punitive
and compensatory damages under s. 272 C.P.A. To decide these
issues, the Court must, inter alia, define the characteristics that
are relevant to the determination of whether a commercial representation is
false or misleading, as well as the conditions for exercising the recourses in
damages provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
[2]
In concrete terms, the appellant is appealing a
judgment in which the Quebec Court of Appeal denied his claim for damages on
the basis that the content of the Document did not violate any of the
provisions of the C.P.A. (2009 QCCA 2378, [2010]
R.J.Q. 3). The Court of Appeal’s main reason for
denying the claim was that the Document would not mislead a consumer [translation] “with an
average level of intelligence, scepticism and curiosity” (para. 50). In
this Court, the appellant argues that the criteria used by the Court of Appeal
to define the average consumer for the purposes of the C.P.A. undermine certain of the
foundations of Quebec consumer law. He is therefore asking this Court to
reject that definition, find that the Document is misleading and award him
punitive damages equivalent to nearly $1 million.
[3]
For the reasons that follow, we agree with the
appellant that the Document contains representations that contravene the C.P.A.’s
provisions concerning prohibited business practices. We also agree with him
that the Court of Appeal’s definition of the “average consumer” is inconsistent
with the objectives of the C.P.A. and must therefore be rejected.
Finally, we would allow his claim for compensatory and punitive damages, but
only in part.
II. Origin of the Case
[4]
On August 26, 1999, the appellant, Jean‑Marc Richard,
found the Document in his mail. It was in English only and was in the form of
a “letter” addressed to him and signed by Elizabeth Matthews, Director of
Sweepstakes. Along the edge of the letter were various boxes printed in
colour, some of which, because they referred to Time magazine, could
lead the recipient to infer that it was from the respondents. The Document
began with a sentence that immediately caught the reader’s attention:
OUR SWEEPSTAKES RESULTS ARE NOW FINAL:
MR JEAN MARC RICHARD HAS WON A CASH PRIZE OF $833,337.00!
[5]
However, a closer look at the Document reveals
that this passage was part of a two‑part sentence that read as follows:
If you have and return the Grand Prize winning
entry in time and correctly answer a skill‑testing question, we will
officially announce that
OUR
SWEEPSTAKES RESULTS ARE NOW FINAL: MR JEAN MARC RICHARD HAS WON A CASH
PRIZE OF $833,337.00!
[6]
This opening sentence clearly illustrates the
technique used in the writing and layout of the Document: several exclamatory
sentences in bold uppercase letters, whose purpose was to catch the reader’s
attention by suggesting that he or she had won a large cash prize, were
combined with conditional clauses in smaller print, some of which began with
the words “If you have and return the Grand Prize winning entry in time”. For
example, the Document identified the appellant as one of the latest sweepstakes
winners and stated in large print that payment of his cash prize had been
authorized. However, the heading “LATEST CASH PRIZE WINNERS”, under
which the appellant’s name appeared, was preceded by the following sentence in
small letters: “If you have and return the Grand Prize winning entry in time,
our new list of major cash prize winners will read as follows”.
[7]
This same writing technique was used elsewhere
in the letter, as several prominent sentences intended to boost the recipient’s
enthusiasm were combined with inconspicuous conditional clauses. It will be
helpful to reproduce some passages from the Document to better illustrate the
specific features of this technique:
If you have and return the Grand Prize winning
entry in time and correctly answer a skill‑testing question, we’ll
confirm that
WE ARE NOW AUTHORIZED TO PAY $833,337.00 IN CASH TO MR JEAN MARC
RICHARD!
. . .
. . . And now that we’ve been
authorized to pay the prize money, the very next time you hear from us if you
win, it will be to inform you that
A BANK CHEQUE
FOR $833,337.00 IS ON ITS WAY TO —— ST!
. . .
. . . The truth is, if you hold the
Grand Prize winning number,
YOU WILL FORFEIT THE
ENTIRE $833,337.00 IF YOU FAIL TO RESPOND TO THIS NOTICE!
[8]
Along with these many references to the “Grand
Prize winning entry”, the Document assigned the appellant a “Prize Claim
Number” that was to be used for identification purposes when the entries were
validated. In addition, the back side of the letter informed the appellant
that he would qualify for a $100,000 bonus prize if he validated his entry
within five days. It then referred to various benefits the appellant could
have if he decided to subscribe to Time magazine at the same time as he
validated his entry. All this information was set out as follows in the
Document:
YOU’LL QUALIFY FOR A $100,000.00 BONUS IF
YOU RESPOND WITHIN 5 DAYS!
. . .
YOU’LL RECEIVE A FREE GIFT: THE ULTRONICTM
PANORAMIC CAMERA & PHOTO ALBUM SET!
. . .
YOU’LL ALSO RECEIVE TIME AT UP TO 74% SAVINGS!
. . .
. . . And if you hold the Grand Prize
winning entry,
A BANK CHEQUE
FOR $833,337.00 IN CASH WILL BE SENT TO YOU VIA CERTIFIED MAIL — IF YOU
RESPOND NOW!
[9]
To show more clearly what the Document looked
like, we have reproduced it in its entirety in an appendix to these reasons.
For now, suffice it to say that the Document’s visual content and writing style
are central to the issue of whether the mailing of the Document constitutes a
prohibited practice within the meaning of the C.P.A.
[10]
In addition to the Document, the mailing
received by the appellant contained a reply coupon entitled “Official Entry
Certificate” and a return envelope on which the official rules of the
sweepstakes appeared in small print. The reply coupon also offered the
appellant the possibility of subscribing to Time magazine for a period
ranging from seven months to two years. As well, the official rules
stated that a winning number had been pre‑selected by computer and that
the holder of that number could receive the grand prize only if the reply
coupon was returned by the deadline. If the holder of the pre‑selected
winning number did not return the reply coupon, the rules explained, the grand
prize winner would be selected by random drawing among all eligible entries,
that is, everyone who had returned the reply coupon, and each participant’s
odds of winning would then be 1:120 million.
[11]
The appellant testified that he had carefully
read the Document twice the day he received it and had concluded that he had
just won US$833,337. The next day, he took the Document to work to ask a vice‑president
of the company he worked for, whose first language was English, whether he had
understood the Document correctly. The vice‑president agreed that the
appellant had just won the grand prize referred to in the Document. Convinced
that he was about to receive the promised amount, the appellant immediately
returned the reply coupon that was in the envelope. In doing so, he also
subscribed to Time magazine for two years, and this entitled him to
receive a free camera and photo album, as was indicated on the back of the
Document.
[12]
The appellant received the camera and photo
album a short time later. He also began regularly receiving issues of the
magazine. However, the cheque he was expecting was a long time coming.
Believing that he had been patient enough, he decided to call Elizabeth
Matthews at Time Inc. to inquire about the processing of his cheque.
After leaving a few messages to which he received no reply, the appellant was
finally able to speak with a representative of the marketing department of the
respondent Time Inc. in New York. He then learned that he would not
be receiving a cheque, because the Document mailed to him had not contained the
winning entry for the draw. During the telephone conversation,
Time Inc.’s representative told the appellant that the Document was merely
an invitation to participate in a sweepstakes. The appellant was also informed
that Elizabeth Matthews did not exist; the name was merely a “pen name”
used by the respondents in their advertising material.
[13]
The appellant replied that the Document clearly
announced that he was the prize winner. His protests got him nowhere. The
respondents flatly refused to pay him the amount he was claiming.
[14]
On September 29, 2000, the appellant filed
a motion to institute proceedings. He first asked the Quebec Superior Court to
declare him to be the winner of the cash prize mentioned in the Document. He
argued that the Document was an offer to contract within the meaning of
art. 1388 of the Civil Code of Québec, S.Q. 1991, c. 64 (“C.C.Q.”),
and that he had accepted the offer by returning the reply coupon. He
accordingly asked the court to order the respondents to provide him with the
skill‑testing question and pay him the grand prize amount. In the
alternative, he asked the court to order the respondents to pay compensatory
and punitive damages corresponding to the value of the grand prize (A.R.,
vol. I, at p. 53).
III.
Judicial History
A. Quebec Superior Court (2007 QCCS 3390, [2007] R.J.Q. 2008, Cohen J.)
[15]
Cohen J. began by considering the
contractual portion of the claim. She found that the parties had not entered
into a contract and accordingly refused to order payment of the prize claimed
by the appellant.
[16]
Cohen J. then considered the appellant’s
claim for damages, which was based on alleged violations of the C.P.A.
She held that the convoluted style of the offer contravened Title II of
the C.P.A. on prohibited business practices. She wrote the following:
The
very same “conditional” wording which enabled Time to avoid the argument that a
contract was formed or that it undertook unconditionally to pay $833,337
to Mr. Richard, illustrates the contention that this document was specifically
designed to mislead the recipient, that it contains misleading and even
false representations, contrary to the clear wording of article 219 of the
Consumer Protection Act . . . . [Emphasis in original;
para. 34.]
[17]
Cohen J. reached this conclusion on the
basis of the general impression conveyed by the Document. Referring to
s. 218 C.P.A., she stated that the Document gave the general
impression that the appellant had won the grand prize. In her view, the
general design of the Document thus amounted to a false or misleading representation
within the meaning of s. 219 C.P.A.
[18]
Cohen J. added that the Document contained
two false representations. First, its signer, Elizabeth Matthews,
did not exist, so she could not have “certified” the content of the Document,
contrary to what was stated. That fiction was in clear contravention of
ss. 219 and 238 C.P.A., since it gave an imaginary person a
particular status or identity (para. 38). Next, the fact that the
appellant might not be the grand prize winner had been withheld from him by the
respondents or, at the very least, had been “buried in a sea of text” with the
expectation that his enthusiasm would induce him to subscribe to Time
magazine (para. 39). In Cohen J.’s opinion, the failure to reveal such an
important fact was contrary to s. 228 C.P.A. She summed up her
view on the presence of false or misleading information in the Document as
follows: “It is patently obvious to any reader that the mailing from Time was
not only false and incomplete, it was specifically designed to be misleading,
both in the words chosen, the size of the conditions or disclaimers and their
ambiguity, especially to a person who is not reading in his or her mother
tongue” (para. 40).
[19]
Cohen J. added that she did not need to
determine whether the appellant had actually been misled by the content of the
Document (para. 49). To hold that a commercial representation is a
practice prohibited by the C.P.A., it is sufficient for a court to find
that the average consumer, that is, one who is credulous and inexperienced,
could be misled:
There
can be no doubt here that the unsolicited publicity sent to Mr. Richard
indeed had the capacity to mislead if viewed through the eyes of the average,
inexperienced French‑speaking consumer in Quebec. In any event, the
testimony of Mr. Richard made it clear that he would never have read the
subscription portion of the document had the misleading representations not
been present, making it obvious that his paid subscription to Time Magazine
was a direct result of these misleading representations in the present case.
[para. 49]
[20]
According to Cohen J., the respondents’
advertising strategy, as revealed by the content of the Document, involved the
use of practices prohibited by Title II of the C.P.A. As a result,
the civil sanctions provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. were available.
[21]
Relying on the principles adopted by the Quebec
Court of Appeal in Nichols v. Toyota Drummondville (1982) inc., [1995]
R.J.Q. 746, Cohen J. stated that, in certain circumstances, punitive
damages can be awarded under s. 272 C.P.A. in the absence of
prejudice to the consumer, that is, even if compensatory damages are not
awarded at the same time (para. 55). In any event, she found that the
evidence in the record showed that the appellant had suffered moral injuries — difficulty sleeping and embarrassment in
his relations with the people around him — as a result of the respondents’ refusal to pay him the grand prize
(para. 57). Cohen J. set the value of those moral injuries
at $1,000.
[22]
Next, Cohen J. stated that it was
appropriate in this case to award the appellant punitive damages in addition to
the compensatory damages. On the issue of the quantum of punitive damages, she
added that art. 1621 C.C.Q. required the court to consider all the
circumstances, including the debtor’s patrimonial situation and the gravity of
the debtor’s fault. In discussing the gravity of the fault, Cohen J. held
that the respondents had failed to fulfil the obligations imposed on them by
the C.P.A. by sending “thousands of these false and misleading mailings
to francophone consumers in Quebec” (para. 59). She added that the
respondents had also violated the Charter of the French language,
R.S.Q., c. C‑11, by sending the appellant advertising material in
English only (para. 64). In her view, such a violation of the Charter
of the French language could be taken into consideration in assessing the
quantum of punitive damages awarded under s. 272 C.P.A.
(para. 66).
[23]
Furthermore, Cohen J. stated that the
sweepstakes advertising method was quite lucrative for the respondents. She
noted that, although the quantum of punitive damages should not convey the
impression that the court in this case was using those damages to indirectly
uphold the contractual portion of the appellant’s claim, the quantum
nonetheless had to reflect the deterrent function of such damages and take the
respondents’ patrimonial situation into account. Exercising her judicial
discretion, she fixed the quantum of the punitive damages awarded to the
appellant at $100,000, which corresponded to the value of the “Bonus”
prize to which the appellant would have been entitled if he had had the winning
entry and returned the reply coupon within five days.
[24]
Cohen J. further ordered, again exercising
her judicial discretion, that the costs awarded to the appellant be calculated
on the basis of the value of the action “as instituted”,
namely $1,250,887.10, thus enabling the appellant to be reimbursed a
portion of his judicial and extrajudicial costs, including the fees paid to his
attorneys (para. 73).
B. Quebec Court of Appeal (2009 QCCA 2378, [2010] R.J.Q. 3, Chamberland, Morin and
Rochon JJ.A.)
[25]
Both parties appealed the Superior Court’s
decision. The Quebec Court of Appeal, in reasons written by
Chamberland J.A., allowed the respondents’ appeal and dismissed the
incidental appeal. It thus dismissed the appellant’s recourse in damages
in its entirety, but without costs because of the nature of the case and the
novelty of the issues (para. 53).
[26]
The Court of Appeal began by dismissing the
appellant’s incidental appeal with respect to the payment of the prize. That
conclusion is no longer being challenged. The principal issue concerned the
award of compensatory and punitive damages against the respondents.
[27]
The Court of Appeal held, contrary to the
respondents’ argument, that the C.P.A. was applicable in this case.
Chamberland J.A. pointed out that s. 217 C.P.A. clearly states
that the fact that a prohibited practice has been used is not subordinate to
whether or not a contract has been made (para. 25). He added that in any
event, the parties had in fact formed a contractual relationship by means of
the offer to participate in a sweepstakes and the acceptance of that offer in
the form of the return of the reply coupon (para. 26).
[28]
Following those initial findings, the Court of
Appeal concluded that the respondents had not violated the C.P.A.
First, in its view, the respondents had not violated s. 228 C.P.A.
by failing to indicate clearly in the Document that the appellant might not be the
grand prize winner (para. 28).
[29]
Next, the Court of Appeal held that using the
name of a fictitious person, Elizabeth Matthews, as the signer of the
Document did not contravene s. 238(c) C.P.A. The use of a
“pen name” did not on its own have the potential to mislead consumers about the
merchant’s identity and was simply intended to [translation]
“personalize” the mailings (para. 29).
[30]
Finally, Chamberland J.A. disagreed with
Cohen J.’s view that the Document contained false or misleading
representations contrary to s. 219 C.P.A. The Court of Appeal
stated that it could not conclude that the Document might give the average
Quebec consumer the general impression that the recipient was the grand prize
winner (paras. 49‑50). The court was not even critical of the
respondents’ conduct:
[translation] With respect, I see eye‑catching
text in the documentation sent to the [appellant], but I do not see any
misleading, underhanded or deceitful statements. I even suspect that the
[appellant], a well‑informed businessman who worked locally and
internationally in both French and English, understood the sweepstakes and his
chances of winning perfectly well from the very start. [para. 51]
[31]
According to the Court of Appeal, there were no
false or misleading representations in the Document. Although the court seemed
to acknowledge that the Document’s eye‑catching headings might initially
convey the impression that the appellant had just won the grand prize, it
expressed the view that a careful reading of the Document was sufficient to
dispel that impression. It is, in a word, up to consumers to be suspicious of
advertisements that seem too good to be true. For these reasons, the Court of
Appeal set aside the award of compensatory and punitive damages against the
respondents.
IV.
Analysis
A.
Issues
[32]
This appeal raises the following issues:
1. What is the proper approach in Quebec for determining
whether an advertisement constitutes a false or misleading representation for
the purposes of the Consumer Protection Act?
2. In the absence of a contract referred to in s. 2 C.P.A.,
can a consumer exercise a recourse in damages under s. 272 C.P.A.?
3. What are the conditions for exercising the recourse in
punitive damages provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.?
4. Should punitive damages be awarded in this case and, if
so, what criteria should be considered in determining their quantum?
B.
Review of the General Objectives of Consumer
Law and the Structure of the C.P.A.
[33]
For the purposes of this appeal, this Court must
interpret certain core components of the legal scheme established by the C.P.A.
As we mentioned above, we must define the characteristics of the prohibition
against certain advertising practices and the conditions for exercising the
recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. where that prohibition has
been violated. For this, a brief review of the objectives of modern consumer
law and the origins of that law in Quebec and Canada will be helpful.
(1) Rise of the Consumer Society and Its
Impact on the Normative Environment of Consumer Protection
[34]
Historically, the Canadian consumer protection
legislation was originally focused on protecting consumers from [translation] “abuses of power” by
merchants (L.‑A. Couture, “Rapport sur la protection du consommateur
au niveau fédéral en droit pénal canadien”, in Travaux de l’Association
Henri Capitant des amis de la culture juridique française, vol. 24, La
protection des consommateurs (1975), 303, at p. 307).
[35]
Preserving a competitive economic environment
remained central to Canadian consumer protection mechanisms until the mid‑20th century.
Consumer protection remained indirect in nature: for example, federal
legislation was focused more on regulating the Canadian economy at a structural
level than on directly protecting consumers’ interests (see J.‑L. Baudouin,
“Rapport général”, in Travaux de l’Association Henri Capitant des amis de la
culture juridique française, vol. 24, La protection des
consommateurs (1975), 3, at p. 4).
[36]
With the rise of the consumer society after
World War II, however, new concerns came to the fore with respect, in
particular, to the increased vulnerability of consumers (N. L’Heureux and
M. Lacoursière, Droit de la consommation (6th ed. 2011), at
pp. 1‑4).
[37]
Changes in the marketplace led to the
realization that consumers needed to be better protected. In fact, the
liberalization of markets favoured the emergence of systems focused more on
protecting consumers (see Baudouin, at pp. 3‑4; see also Prebushewski
v. Dodge City Auto (1984) Ltd., 2005 SCC 28, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 649, at
para. 33).
[38]
Both the Parliament of Canada and the Quebec
legislature tried to resolve the problems raised by the new consumer society.
Within the Canadian constitutional framework, Parliament and the legislatures
have all played important — and
often complementary — roles in
this regard. We will not dwell here on the measures adopted by Parliament.
Instead, we will be focusing on the Quebec legislation and on how it has
developed.
[39]
The rise of the consumer society called
attention to the limits of the general law in Quebec, as in the other Canadian
provinces. In Quebec, the contractual fairness model based on freedom of
contract, consensualism and the binding force of contracts seemed increasingly
unsuited to ensuring real equality between merchants and consumers. When the
Quebec legislature first became involved in this area, its goal was to develop
a new model of contractual fairness based on a scheme of public order that
would be an exception to the traditional rules of the general law (see
Baudouin, at p. 5).
[40]
Quebec consumer law has essentially centred
around two successive consumer protection statutes enacted in 1971 and
1978, which were subsequently supplemented by the inclusion of certain
provisions of public order in the Civil Code of Québec. The first Consumer
Protection Act (S.Q. 1971, c. 74) applied only to contracts involving
credit and distance contracts, and did not deal separately with business
practices. In reality, advertising was regulated only indirectly by means of a
legal fiction incorporating its content as a term of the resulting contract.
Within just a few years after the first Act came into force, it had become
obvious that the solution adopted by the legislature needed to be reviewed.
[41]
Today’s Consumer Protection Act
establishes a much more elaborate legal scheme than the previous version did.
Its enactment reflects the Quebec legislature’s desire to extend the protection
of the C.P.A. to a broader range of contracts and to explicitly regulate
certain business practices that are considered fraudulent as regards their
effect on consumers. In practical terms, the Act is divided into seven titles
that reflect the main concerns of Quebec consumer law. Title I,
“Contracts Regarding Goods and Services”, contains provisions whose primary
purpose is to restore the contractual balance between merchants and consumers.
Title II, “Business Practices”, identifies certain types of business
conduct as prohibited practices in order to ensure the veracity of information
provided to consumers through advertising or otherwise.
[42]
These two main titles are supplemented by, among
others, Title IV, which sets out the civil and penal recourses that can be
exercised to sanction violations of the Act by merchants. Aside from the
recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A., on which this appeal is
focused, the main recourses are as follows: a demand by a consumer for the
nullity of a contract (s. 271 C.P.A.), a penal proceeding
instituted by the Director of Criminal and Penal Prosecutions (s. 277 C.P.A.)
and an application for an interlocutory or permanent injunction by the Attorney
General of Quebec, the president of the Office de la protection du consommateur
(“Office”) or a legal person that is a consumer advocacy body (ss. 290,
310 and 316 C.P.A.). The president of the Office may also negotiate a
voluntary undertaking by a merchant to comply with the Act (s. 314 C.P.A.).
(2) Protection Against False or
Misleading Advertising
[43]
The measures to protect consumers from
fraudulent advertising practices are one expression of a legislative intent to
move away from the maxim caveat emptor, or “let the buyer beware”.
As a result of these measures, merchants, manufacturers and advertisers are
responsible for the veracity of information they provide to consumers and may,
should such information contain falsehoods, incur the civil or penal
consequences provided for in the legislation. As Judge Matheson of the Ontario
County Court explained in R. v. Colgate‑Palmolive Ltd., [1970] 1
C.C.C. 100, a case involving federal law, the maxim caveat venditor is
now far more appropriate to describe the merchant‑consumer
relationship. In an oft‑cited judgment, he wrote the following:
This
legislation is the expression of a social purpose, namely the establishment of
more ethical trade practices calculated to afford greater protection to the
consuming public. It represents the will of the people of Canada that the old
maxim caveat emptor, let the purchaser beware, yield somewhat to the
more enlightened view caveat venditor — let the seller beware.
[p. 102]
(3) Protection Against False or
Misleading Representations in the C.P.A.
[44]
One of the main objectives of Title II of
the C.P.A. is to protect consumers from false or misleading
representations. Many of the practices it prohibits relate to the veracity of
information provided to consumers. Section 219 C.P.A. sets out
this objective in very clear language. It provides, quite generally, that no
merchant, manufacturer or advertiser may make false or misleading representations
to a consumer by any means whatever. The word “representation” is defined in
s. 216 C.P.A. as including an affirmation, behaviour or an
omission. Section 219 C.P.A. is supplemented by prohibitions
relating to certain specific types of representations (ss. 220 to 251 C.P.A.).
[45]
Section 218 C.P.A. guides the
application of all these provisions of Title II. It explains the approach
to be used to determine whether a representation is to be considered a
prohibited practice. Its wording is based to a large extent on that of
s. 52(4) of the Combines Investigation Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-23 ,
a slightly different version of which can now be found in s. 52(4) of the Competition
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑34 . Section 218 C.P.A. reads
as follows:
218. To determine whether or not a representation constitutes a
prohibited practice, the general impression it gives, and, as the case may be,
the literal meaning of the terms used therein must be taken into account.
[46]
The analytical approach provided for in
s. 218 C.P.A. requires the consideration of two factors: the
“general impression” given by a representation and the “literal meaning” of the
words used in it. We will review the requirements of each of these two
factors.
[47]
The phrase “literal meaning of the terms used
therein” does not raise any interpretation problems. It simply means that
every word used in a representation must be interpreted in its ordinary sense.
The purpose of this part of s. 218 C.P.A. is to prohibit merchants
from raising a defence based on a subtle, technical or convoluted meaning of a
word used in a representation. The legislature’s intention was thus that the
meanings given to words used in representations be the same as their meanings
in everyday life.
[48]
What is meant by the expression “general impression”
requires further explanation, however. Although there have been few cases on
this point, the courts seem in some recent decisions to have established more
explicit principles from which a predominant interpretation can be drawn.
[49]
One of these principles that has recently been
developed more clearly by the Quebec courts relates to the abstract nature of
the analysis of the general impression given by a representation. Influenced
by Professor L’Heureux’s comments on this point, the courts now seem to
accept, as did the courts below in the instant case, that the “general
impression” conveyed by a representation must be analysed in the abstract, that
is, without considering the personal attributes of the consumer who has
instituted proceedings against the merchant. (See Québec
(Procureur général) v. Distribution Canovex Inc., [1996] J.Q. no 5302
(QL) (C.Q. (Crim. & Pen. Div.)), at paras. 39‑40; Option
Consommateurs v. Brick Warehouse, l.p., 2011 QCCS 569 (CanLII), at
paras. 71‑73; N. L’Heureux, Droit de la consommation (5th ed.
2000), at p. 347. See also Tremblay v.
Ameublements Tanguay inc., 2011 QCCS 3078 (CanLII), at para. 97; and
L’Heureux and Lacoursière, at pp. 489‑90.)
[50]
This approach is consistent with the spirit of
the C.P.A., whose main objective is to protect consumers. The courts
must therefore be able to sanction any representation that, from an objective
standpoint, constitutes a prohibited practice. Whether a commercial
representation did or did not cause prejudice to one or more consumers is not
relevant to the determination of whether a merchant engaged in a prohibited
practice within the meaning of Title II of the C.P.A. The C.P.A.
is concerned not only with remedying the harm caused to consumers by false or
misleading representations, but also with preventing the distribution of
advertisements that could mislead consumers and possibly cause them various
types of prejudice.
[51]
In sum, this is the objective being pursued in
requiring that an abstract analysis be conducted under s. 218 C.P.A.
This approach takes account of the concrete impact that advertising can have on
consumers in their everyday lives. Professor Claude Masse has written the
following on this subject:
[translation]
Commercial advertising often plays on the general impression that may be
conveyed by an advertisement and even on the literal meaning of the terms
used. Information in advertisements is transmitted quickly. Advertising
relies on the image and the impression of the moment. This general impression
is often what is sought in advertising. By definition, consumers do not have
time to think at length about the real meaning of the messages being conveyed
to them or about whether words are being used in their literal sense. The
content of advertising is taken seriously in consumer law. Consumers do not
have to wonder whether or not the promises made to them or the undertakings
given are realistic, serious or plausible. Merchants, manufacturers and
advertisers are therefore bound by the content of messages actually conveyed to
consumers. [Emphasis added.]
(Loi
sur la protection du consommateur: analyse et commentaires (1999), at
p. 828)
[52]
The use of the general impression test of
s. 218 C.P.A. reflects how, in practice, consumers are very
frequently led to exercise their freedom of choice. The question thus becomes
how the courts are to determine the general impression conveyed by a commercial
representation. The parties have taken very different positions in this Court
on the interpretation of this concept.
[53]
The appellant basically argues that the general
impression conveyed by a written advertisement must be assessed contextually,
that is, by considering both the writing style and the choice of words. He
submits that the approach required by s. 218 C.P.A. does not
involve considering the words used in an advertisement in isolation from the
medium in which they are used. In other words, the appellant contends that the
general impression is based both on the layout of an advertisement and on the
meaning of the words used.
[54]
The respondents counter that the general
impression test must not be likened to an “instant impression” test. They
argue that the general impression is not the instant impression conveyed by an
advertisement’s layout and that the courts cannot dispense with a careful
reading of a written advertisement. The respondents therefore submit that
s. 218 C.P.A. requires an analytical approach that emphasizes the
text of an advertisement rather than its layout.
[55]
In our opinion, the respondents are wrong to
downplay the importance of the layout of an advertisement. It must be
remembered that the legislature adopted the general impression test to take
account of the techniques and methods that are used in commercial advertising
to exert a significant influence on consumer behaviour. This means that
considerable importance must be attached not only to the text but also to the
entire context, including the way the text is displayed to the consumer.
[56]
However, the respondents are right to say that
the general impression referred to in s. 218 C.P.A. is not the
impression formed as a result of a rushed or partial reading of an
advertisement. The analysis under that provision must take account of the entire
advertisement rather than merely of portions of its content. But it is just as
true that the analytical approach required by s. 218 C.P.A. does
not involve the minute dissection of the text of an advertisement to determine
whether the general impression it conveys is false or misleading. The courts
must not approach a written advertisement as if it were a commercial contract
by reading it several times, going over every detail to make sure they
understand all its subtleties. Reading over the entire text once should be
sufficient to assess the general impression conveyed by a written
advertisement, and it is that general impression that will then make it
possible to determine whether a representation made by a merchant constitutes a
prohibited practice.
[57]
In sum, it is our opinion that the test under
s. 218 C.P.A. is that of the first impression. In the case of
false or misleading advertising, the general impression is the one a person has
after an initial contact with the entire advertisement, and it relates to both
the layout of the advertisement and the meaning of the words used. This test
is similar to the one that must be applied under the Trade‑marks Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. T-13 , to determine whether a trade‑mark causes
confusion (Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin v. Boutiques Cliquot Ltée, 2006 SCC
23, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 824, at para. 20; Masterpiece Inc. v. Alavida
Lifestyles Inc., 2011 SCC 27, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 387, at para. 41).
[58]
We cannot therefore accept the distinction
proposed by the respondents between “instant impression” and “general
impression”. In actual fact, the respondents are asking this Court to apply a
standard much more exacting than that of the first impression. This conclusion
flows necessarily from their position on the application of the general
impression test to the facts of the case at bar. To explain why their
advertising strategy does not contravene Title II of the C.P.A.,
they state that the “documents . . . were in the possession of [the
appellant] for a lengthy period of time and [that he] was able to read them
carefully on several occasions before sending in the Official Entry
Certificate” (R.F., at para. 46 (emphasis added)).
[59]
We will now consider the approach taken by the
Court of Appeal in this case in light of the principles discussed above
regarding the analytical approach required by s. 218 C.P.A. With
respect, the Court of Appeal seems, in our view, to have favoured an approach
that does away with the need to ascertain the general impression conveyed by
the Document and replaces it with an opinion resulting from an analysis. In
substance, this approach involved dissecting the Document to isolate and
connect parts of sentences to reveal the “real message” it conveyed
(paras. 45‑48). This led the Court of Appeal to attach excessive
importance to the parts of the Document containing phrases such as “[i]f you have and return the Grand Prize winning entry” and “if you
hold the Grand Prize winning number” (A.R., vol. II, at p. 59). In
so doing, it departed from the general impression test provided for in
s. 218 C.P.A.
[60]
This dissection of the text by the Court of
Appeal resembles the classical civil law approach to contract analysis and
strays from the determination of the general impression the entire
advertisement conveys to a consumer. Furthermore, the purpose of Title II
of the C.P.A. is to make merchants responsible for the content of their
advertisements on the basis of the general impression the advertisements
convey. By adopting so exacting a standard in s. 218 C.P.A., the
legislature intended to ensure that consumers could view commercial advertising
with confidence rather than suspicion. Thus, the objective of the current
legislation is to enable a consumer to assume that the general impression
conveyed by an advertisement is accurate and not the opposite. In sum, the
analytical approach chosen by the Court of Appeal for establishing the general
impression conveyed by the respondents’ advertisement was inconsistent with the
general impression test adopted by the legislature.
(4) Consumer in Issue in Title II
of the C.P.A.
[61]
The above discussion of the general impression
concept leaves an important question unanswered: From what perspective should
the courts assess the general impression conveyed by a commercial representation?
Who is the consumer for the purposes of s. 218 C.P.A.? Answering
this question is the second step of the analytical approach required by
s. 218 C.P.A.
[62]
In recent decisions, judges have commonly used
the expression “average consumer” to describe the consumer in issue in
Title II of the C.P.A. Of course, the average consumer does not
exist, but is the product of a legal fiction personified by an imaginary
consumer to whom a level of sophistication that reflects the purpose of the C.P.A.
is attributed. In the case at bar, the crux of the issue is whether the level
of sophistication of the average consumer conceptualized by the Court of Appeal
is consistent with the objectives of the C.P.A.
[63]
The appellant argues that the Court of Appeal
erred in defining the average consumer as one with [translation] “an average level of
intelligence, scepticism and curiosity” (para. 50). He submits that the
Court of Appeal departed from the prevailing line of authority in Quebec,
according to which the average consumer must be considered [translation] “credulous and
inexperienced”. He adds that, by stressing the average consumer’s
intelligence, scepticism and curiosity, the Court of Appeal proposed a new
standard that could deprive many consumers of the protection of the C.P.A. (A.F., at para. 40).
[64]
The respondents argue that the Court of Appeal
did not change the definition of the average consumer. In their view,
Chamberland J.A. simply pointed out that the average consumer, although
credulous, is not completely unintelligent. He did not change the requirements
of s. 218 C.P.A. (R.F., at paras. 28 and 32).
[65]
The C.P.A. is one of a number of statutes
enacted to protect Canadian consumers. The courts that have applied these
statutes have often used the average consumer test. In conformity with the
objective of protection that underlies such legislation, the courts have
assumed that the average consumer is not very sophisticated.
[66]
This Court’s decisions relating to trade‑marks
provide a good example of this interpretive approach. In Mattel, Inc.
v. 3894207 Canada Inc., 2006 SCC 22, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 772, the Court was
asked to clarify the standard to be used by the courts to determine whether a
trade‑mark causes confusion with a registered trade‑mark.
Binnie J., writing for the Court, concluded that the average consumers
protected by the Trade‑marks Act are “ordinary hurried purchasers”
(para. 56). He explained that “[t]he standard is not that of people ‘who
never notice anything’ but of persons who take no more than ‘ordinary care to
observe that which is staring them in the face’” (para. 58).
[67]
The general impression test provided for in
s. 218 C.P.A. must be applied from a perspective similar to that of
“ordinary hurried purchasers”, that is, consumers who take no more than ordinary
care to observe that which is staring them in the face upon their first contact
with an advertisement. The courts must not conduct their analysis from the
perspective of a careful and diligent consumer.
[68]
Obviously, the adjectives used to describe the
average consumer may vary from one statute to another. Such variations reflect
the diversity of economic realities to which different statutes apply and of
their objectives. The most important thing is not the adjectives used, but the
level of sophistication expected of the consumer.
[69]
In applying the general impression test provided
for in s. 218 C.P.A., the Quebec courts have traditionally used the
words “credulous” and “inexperienced” to describe the consumer in issue in the
Act, relying on R. v. Imperial Tobacco Products Ltd., [1971] 5 W.W.R. 409 (Alta. S.C., A.D.), to
incorporate the “credulous and inexperienced person” concept into Title II
of the C.P.A. (Masse, at p. 828). After the courts had referred to
this concept occasionally in the 1980s and 1990s, including in P.G. du
Québec v. Louis Bédard Inc., 1986 CarswellQue 981 (Ct. Sess. P.), the
Quebec Court of Appeal rendered a landmark decision on this question in Turgeon
v. Germain Pelletier ltée, [2001] R.J.Q. 291, in which it confirmed that
the “credulous and inexperienced” consumer test is applicable in Quebec
consumer law. Fish J.A., as he then was, wrote the following on this
point:
[translation] As my colleague
Gendreau J.A. pointed out in Nichols v. Toyota Drummondville (1982)
inc., the Consumer Protection Act is a statute of public order whose
purpose is to restore the contractual [balance] between merchants and their
customers. The credulous and inexperienced person test must be used to
assess the misleading nature of the advertising and business practices to which
the Consumer Protection Act applies. [Emphasis added;
para. 36.]
[70]
Since then, trial courts in Quebec have followed
Turgeon, including in several class actions based on the C.P.A.
(see Riendeau v. Brault & Martineau inc., 2007 QCCS 4603, [2007] R.J.Q. 2620, at para. 149, aff’d
by 2010 QCCA 366, [2010] R.J.Q. 507; Adams v. Amex Bank of Canada, 2009 QCCS 2695, [2009] R.J.Q. 1746, at para. 126; Marcotte v. Banque de Montréal, 2009 QCCS 2764 (CanLII),
at para. 357; Marcotte v. Fédération des caisses Desjardins du Québec,
2009 QCCS 2743 (CanLII), at para. 257). In sum,
it is clear that, since Turgeon, the “general impression” referred to in
s. 218 C.P.A. is the impression of a commercial representation on a
credulous and inexperienced consumer.
[71]
Thus, in Quebec consumer law, the expression
“average consumer” does not refer to a reasonably prudent and diligent person,
let alone a well‑informed person. To meet the objectives of the C.P.A.,
the courts view the average consumer as someone who is not particularly
experienced at detecting the falsehoods or subtleties found in commercial
representations.
[72]
The words “credulous and inexperienced” therefore
describe the average consumer for the purposes of the C.P.A. This
description of the average consumer is consistent with the legislature’s
intention to protect vulnerable persons from the dangers of certain advertising
techniques. The word “credulous” reflects the fact that the average consumer
is prepared to trust merchants on the basis of the general impression conveyed
to him or her by their advertisements. However, it does not suggest that the
average consumer is incapable of understanding the literal meaning of the words
used in an advertisement if the general layout of the advertisement does not
render those words unintelligible.
[73]
We must therefore find that the Court of Appeal
changed the standard of the average consumer for the purposes of Title II
of the C.P.A. and that its decision was incompatible with the C.P.A.’s
objective of protecting consumers. In our opinion, defining the average
consumer as having [translation]
“an average level of intelligence, scepticism and curiosity” is inconsistent
with the letter and the spirit of s. 218 C.P.A.
Such a definition raises a number of problems.
[74]
First, the words “average level of intelligence”
suggest that the consumer the legislature wanted to protect in Title II of
the C.P.A. is a consumer who has the same level of sophistication as the
average person. As we mentioned above, consumer law does not protect consumers
only if they have proven to be prudent and well informed. The C.P.A.’s
general objective of protecting consumers means that the appropriate test is
not that of the prudent and diligent consumer.
[75]
Moreover, from a practical standpoint, this part
of the definition proposed by Chamberland J.A. is not really compatible
with the abstract analysis required by s. 218 C.P.A., since the use
of a standard like that of the “consumer with an average level of intelligence”
could lead the courts to adopt a test based on determining the level of
sophistication of the consumer in question in a given case. Such a test would
make it possible to exonerate a merchant who is lucky enough to be sued by a
consumer of above‑average intelligence. The court’s role would then be
to determine whether the consumer exercising the recourse was in fact misled
rather than whether the advertisement in question constituted a false or
misleading representation. This would decrease the level of protection
provided to consumers by the C.P.A.
[76]
Next, the words “average level of
. . . scepticism” replace the general impression test with a test
based on the opinion formed after a more thorough analysis. It invites the
courts to assume that the average consumer must take concrete action to find
the “real message” hidden behind an advertisement that seems advantageous.
This analytical approach can only weaken the general impression test, since a
sceptical person will be inclined not to believe an advertisement solely on the
basis of the general impression it conveys. A sceptical person will doubt, ask
questions and perhaps make his or her own inquiries. If, at the end of that
process, the person concludes that the content of the advertisement is true to
reality, his or her assessment will be based not on the general impression
conveyed by the advertisement but on the concrete action he or she has taken.
[77]
The above comments also apply to the “average
level of . . . curiosity” the average consumer must be presumed
to have, according to the Court of Appeal. With respect, the use of this
expression rests on the same incorrect premise as does that with respect to the
scepticism of the average consumer. A consumer with “an average level of . . .
curiosity” will not be so stupid or naïve as to rely on the first impression
conveyed by a commercial representation but will be curious enough to consider
that impression more closely. He or she will try to determine whether the
general impression conveyed by an advertisement is actually true to reality.
On this point, we reiterate that the purpose of Title II of the C.P.A.
is to make it possible for consumers to trust the general impression given by
merchants in their advertisements. If this general impression is not true to
reality, the advertisement in question constitutes a false or misleading
representation and the merchant has engaged in a prohibited practice for the
purposes of the C.P.A., regardless of whether the “real message” of the
advertisement could be understood by analysing it in depth. In fact, the Court
of Appeal’s interpretation of the average consumer concept is closer to that of
the diligent person, which is neither mentioned in the Act nor in keeping with
its spirit.
[78]
For all these reasons, we cannot endorse the
definition of the average consumer proposed by the Court of Appeal. In
our opinion, the concept of the credulous and inexperienced consumer applied by
the Quebec courts in the line of authority that prevailed before the judgment
of the Court of Appeal in the instant case is more consistent with the Quebec
legislature’s objective of protecting consumers from false or misleading
advertising. A court asked to assess the veracity of a commercial representation
must therefore engage, under s. 218 C.P.A., in a two‑step
analysis that involves — having
regard, provided that the representation lends itself to such an analysis, to
the literal meaning of the words used by the merchant — (1) describing the general impression that the representation
is likely to convey to a credulous and inexperienced consumer; and
(2) determining whether that general impression is true to reality. If
the answer at the second step is no, the merchant has engaged in a prohibited
practice.
C.
Consistency of the Court of Appeal’s Judgment
with the C.P.A.
[79]
What must now be determined is whether, in light
of these principles, the Court of Appeal was right to reverse the trial judge’s
finding that the Document contained representations that contravened certain
provisions of Title II of the C.P.A. Cohen J. identified
three violations of that Act. We will consider the alleged violations of
ss. 219 and 228 C.P.A. together, since they concern different
aspects of a single reality that cannot easily be separated from one another.
We will discuss the alleged violation of s. 238(c) C.P.A.
separately.
(1) Alleged Violation of Sections 219 and 228 C.P.A.
[80]
Sections 219 and 228 C.P.A. read as
follows:
219. No merchant,
manufacturer or advertiser may, by any means whatever, make false or misleading
representations to a consumer.
228. No merchant, manufacturer or advertiser may fail to mention an
important fact in any representation made to a consumer.
[81]
In the instant case, the alleged violation of
s. 219 C.P.A. lay in the fact that the Document falsely stated that
the appellant was the grand prize winner, while the alleged violation of
s. 228 C.P.A. related specifically to the respondents’ failure to
reveal in the Document that the appellant might not be the grand prize winner.
These two allegations therefore raise the question whether a credulous and
inexperienced consumer, after first reading the Document, would have been under
the general impression that the appellant had won the grand prize or would
instead have understood that the respondents were merely offering him an
opportunity to participate in a contest with a minute chance of winning a cash
prize.
[82]
The “real message” the respondents wanted to
convey by sending the Document must be explained here. The sweepstakes in
issue was a contest in which only one person would win the grand prize. To
receive the prize, the person had to have the winning entry, return the reply
coupon by the deadline and correctly answer a skill‑testing question. Only
one person had the winning entry, which had been selected before the
mailings were sent. However, at the top of each recipient’s document, the word
“claim” appeared, followed by a combination of numbers and letters. In the
event that the pre‑selected winner failed to return the reply coupon, a
draw would be held for the grand prize among all those who had returned it.
[83]
According to the respondents, the average
consumer would be capable of understanding the following after reading once
through the documentation received by the appellant: (1) the appellant
had received number GV1T7IU62; (2) that number was not necessarily the
winning number; (3) if his number was not the pre‑selected number,
his chances of winning were extremely small; (4) for him to have any
chance of winning, the holder of the winning entry would have to fail to return
his or her reply coupon, in which case a random draw would be held among all
those who had returned their own reply coupons by the deadline; and (5) in
such a case, the appellant’s odds of winning would be 1:120 million. The
Court of Appeal accepted the respondents’ argument on this point
(para. 49).
[84]
With respect, we find it hard to understand how
a credulous and inexperienced consumer could deduce all this after reading the
Document for the first time. The first sentence that leaps off the page is the
following one, written in bold uppercase letters:
OUR
SWEEPSTAKES RESULTS ARE NOW FINAL: MR JEAN MARC RICHARD HAS WON A CASH PRIZE
OF $833,337.00!
[85]
The general impression conveyed by the Document
is influenced by this sentence placed at the top of the Document. The average
consumer would of course, assuming that he or she understood English, be
capable of reading the words preceding that sentence: “If you have and return the
Grand Prize winning entry in time and correctly answer a skill‑testing
question, we will officially announce that”. However, it is unreasonable to
assume that the average consumer would be particularly familiar with the
special language or rules of such a sweepstakes and would clearly understand
all the essential elements of the offer made to the appellant in this case.
The Document’s strange collection of affirmations and restrictions is not clear
or intelligible enough to dispel the general impression conveyed by the most
prominent sentences. On the contrary, it is highly likely that the average
consumer would conclude that the appellant held the winning entry and had only
to return the reply coupon to initiate the claim process. Indeed, the Document
did not state anywhere that a winner had been pre‑selected and that the
appellant had received only a participation number. This information instead
appeared on the return envelope that accompanied the Document, where the terms
and conditions of the random draw were defined very vaguely in small print.
[86]
Despite all the conditions laid down in the
Document, on which the respondents placed great emphasis, a point was made in
the Document of referring to the appellant as the sweepstakes winner. In the
column on the left, he was listed with other winners — real or fictitious — and the entry contained the notation “PRIZE STATUS: AUTHORIZED FOR
PAYMENT”. There were repeated indications that a cheque was about to be mailed
to the appellant. He was also urged to put aside all his doubts and hurry to
return the reply coupon, for otherwise he might lose everything! The reply
coupon received by the appellant even referred to the number assigned to him as
a “Prize Claim Number”, not as a contest participation number. It would be
possible to continue this list of tricks used in writing and laying out the
text for a long time.
[87]
In our opinion, the trial judge did not err in
finding that the Document was misleading. The Document conveyed the general
impression that the appellant had won the grand prize. Even if it did not
necessarily contain any statements that were actually false, the fact remains
that it was riddled with misleading representations within the meaning of
s. 219 C.P.A. Furthermore, the contest rules were not all apparent
to someone reading the Document for the first time. These are important facts
that the respondents were required to mention. As a result, the respondents
also violated s. 228 C.P.A.
(2) Alleged Violation of
Section 238(c) C.P.A.
[88]
Section 238(c)
reads as follows:
238. No merchant,
manufacturer or advertiser may, falsely, by any means whatever,
. . .
(c) state that he has a particular
status or identity.
[89]
In our opinion, Chamberland J.A. rightly
concluded that the respondents had not contravened s. 238(c) of the
C.P.A. in this case. The Document contained no false representations
concerning the respondents’ status or identity. It can be understood from a
single reading that the Document was from the respondents and that they did not
claim to have a particular status or identity that they did not actually have.
As the Court of Appeal found, using a fictitious person, Elizabeth Matthews, as
the signer of the Document did not constitute a prohibited practice under
s. 238(c) C.P.A.
D.
Recourse Provided for in Section 272
C.P.A.: Conditions for Exercising the Recourse and Criteria for Granting
Remedies
[90]
Our conclusion that the Document contained
representations contrary to ss. 219 and 228 C.P.A. logically leads
us to the question of the appropriate remedy in this case. The appellant
submits that he is entitled to be awarded the equivalent of nearly
US$1 million in punitive damages under s. 272 C.P.A. The
respondents not only contend that he is not so entitled, but also deny that the
recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. can be exercised by a
consumer to sanction a prohibited practice. This objection raised by the
respondents revives a debate between Quebec authors that has been under way
since the early 1980s and that this Court must now try to settle.
(1)
Section 272 C.P.A. and
Sanctioning Prohibited Practices
[91]
Section 272 C.P.A. reads as follows:
272. If the
merchant or the manufacturer fails to fulfil an obligation imposed on him by
this Act, by the regulations or by a voluntary undertaking made under
section 314 or whose application has been extended by an order under
section 315.1, the consumer may demand, as the case may be, subject to the
other recourses provided by this Act,
(a) the
specific performance of the obligation;
(b) the
authorization to execute it at the merchant’s or manufacturer’s expense;
(c) that
his obligations be reduced;
(d) that
the contract be rescinded;
(e) that
the contract be set aside; or
(f) that
the contract be annulled,
without
prejudice to his claim in damages, in all cases. He may also claim punitive
damages.
[92]
For many years now, the Quebec courts have held
that s. 272 C.P.A. can be applied to sanction prohibited practices
used by merchants and manufacturers (see, inter alia, Chrysler
Canada ltée v. Poulin, 1988 CanLII 1001 (C.A.); A.C.E.F. Sud‑Ouest de Montréal v. Arrangements
alternatifs de crédit du Québec Inc., [1994] R.J.Q. 114 (Sup. Ct.); Beauchamp
v. Relais Toyota inc., [1995] R.J.Q. 741 (C.A.); and Centre d’économie
en chauffage Turcotte inc. v. Ferland, [2003] J.Q. no 18096
(QL) (C.A.)). Defendants in proceedings under
s. 272 C.P.A., and in class actions in particular, nevertheless
argued that this provision should not apply to allegations of violations of
Title II of the Act (see, e.g., 9029‑4596 Québec inc. v.
Duplantie, [1999] R.J.Q. 3059 (C.Q.)). But the Court of Appeal reiterated
in Brault & Martineau that s. 272 does apply to such
violations. In that case, Duval Hesler J.A. stated that [translation] “I believe it has been clearly established that sanctions for
prohibited practices within the meaning of the CPA cannot be limited to the
recourse provided for in s. 253 of that Act” (para. 40), that is, the
recourses available in the general law.
[93]
Despite this case law, the respondents argue
that s. 272 C.P.A. does not apply to prohibited practices. They
submit that the sole purpose of that provision is to sanction failures by
merchants and manufacturers to fulfil the contractual obligations imposed on
them by Title I of the C.P.A. According to the respondents, the
use of a prohibited practice is an offence that can be sanctioned only under
the C.P.A.’s penal provisions.
[94]
The respondents rely on a view long advocated by
Professor L’Heureux. In a former edition of her treatise entitled Droit de
la consommation, she wrote the following at p. 358:
[translation]
Moreover, section 272 does not constitute a sanction for prohibited
practices, since such practices are not obligations imposed by the Act. It
must be recognized that the business practices in question in Title II
are, first and foremost, offences that are matters of directive public order .
. . . They are prohibitions that are sanctioned mainly through penal
proceedings.
(See also N. L’Heureux, “L’interprétation de l’article 272
de la Loi sur la protection du consommateur” (1982), 42 R. du B. 455.)
[95]
Not all the authors agree with Professor
L’Heureux’s view. A review of the literature published in Quebec on this
question even suggests that it is a minority view. Some authors have taken the
position that a literal reading of s. 272 C.P.A. does not support
limiting the obligations to which it refers to certain specific “duties”
imposed by Title I of the Act. In their opinion, the words “obligation
imposed on him by this Act” apply to the obligations established in both
Title I and Title II of the C.P.A. (see, inter alia,
F. Lebeau, “La publicité et la protection des consommateurs” (1981), 41 R. du B.
1016, at p. 1039; C.‑R. Dumais, “Une étude des tenants et
aboutissants des articles 271 et 272 de la Loi sur la protection du
consommateur” (1985), 26 C. de D. 763, at p. 775; Masse,
at p. 835; and D. Lluelles and B. Moore, Droit des
obligations (2006), at p. 316).
[96]
The most thorough critique of Professor L’Heureux’s
view has come from Professor Pauline Roy. According to Professor Roy, to
exclude the prohibitions set out in Title II of the C.P.A. from the
application of s. 272 C.P.A. is to forget that in Quebec civil law,
the failure to fulfil an obligation not to do something can trigger civil
liability in the same way as the failure to fulfil an obligation to do
something. For this reason, she does not believe that [translation] “the [legislature’s] choice
of a negative wording to describe the obligation not to mislead and not to
engage in unfair practices to induce consumers to enter into contracts can have
the effect of depriving consumers of the civil recourses specifically provided
for in the Consumer Protection Act”
(P. Roy, Les dommages exemplaires en droit québécois: instrument de
revalorisation de la responsabilité civile, doctoral thesis (1995), at
p. 476).
[97]
Professor Roy also advances arguments
related to the general interest and the objectives of the C.P.A. If the
contrary view were to prevail, she says, it would have to be concluded that the
Quebec legislature intended to prevent consumers from claiming punitive damages
from merchants or manufacturers who had engaged in practices prohibited by the
Act. In her view, such an outcome would be inconsistent with the role the
legislature intended for Title II of the C.P.A. She explains this
as follows:
[translation] To accept that the
recourse in exemplary damages is unavailable where merchants engage in
prohibited practices would have consequences that the legislature certainly did
not intend, especially given that such practices are generally fraudulent and
often involve trifling amounts. Consumers are thus disinclined to sue, yet
such conduct can, when all is said and done, be a significant source of profit
for merchants. If an award of exemplary damages is unavailable, therefore,
merchants will, given that the risk of being sued is minimal, keep a large
share of the profits derived from their fraudulent conduct. It must be
asked how it can be logical for a merchant who engages in fraudulent practices
to be shielded from an award of exemplary damages even though such a sanction
can be imposed on someone who violates the Act’s other provisions without any
malicious intent. [Emphasis added; p. 476.]
[98]
In our opinion, Professor Roy’s view on this
point is persuasive. Section 272 C.P.A. begins with the following
words: “If the merchant or the manufacturer fails to fulfil an obligation
imposed on him by this Act”. It refers, without distinction, to obligations
imposed “by this Act”. Read literally, this section thus requires that all the
obligations merchants and manufacturers have under the C.P.A. be taken
into account. This undoubtedly includes the obligations in Title II
related to business practices. Therefore, the language of s. 272 C.P.A.
does not support the distinction proposed by Professor L’Heureux between
“obligations imposed by the Act” and “prohibitions”. If the legislature had
intended the word “obligation” in s. 272 C.P.A. to mean something
other than what it means in Quebec civil law, it would have said so. It must
therefore be concluded that the legislature’s intention was that a civil
sanction for prohibited practices would also be available under s. 272 C.P.A.
[99]
This conclusion is consistent with the Quebec
legislature’s general objectives in this area. The purpose of the C.P.A.
is above all to purge business practices in order to protect consumers as fully
as possible. To this end, the legislature has included in the C.P.A.
administrative, civil and penal sanctions that jointly make up the Act’s
enforcement mechanism. The interpretation advocated by the respondents in this
case would greatly reduce the Act’s effectiveness by inappropriately limiting
the role of consumers in ensuring the achievement of its objectives. From this
standpoint, it is preferable to involve consumers, within a well‑defined
framework, in the pursuit of the legislative objectives associated with the
prohibition of certain business practices. The public interest is thus better
served, since consumers can actively contribute to the enforcement of
legislation that is designed to protect them and can make up for any
inadequacies in government intervention (E. P. Belobaba, “Unfair
Trade Practices Legislation: Symbolism and Substance in Consumer Protection”
(1977), 15 Osgoode Hall L.J. 327, at pp. 356‑57).
[100]
In our opinion, s. 272 C.P.A.
establishes a legislative scheme that makes it possible, inter alia,
to sanction prohibited practices by means of civil proceedings instituted by
consumers. However, it is important that this be done in accordance with the
principles governing the application of the C.P.A. and, where
applicable, the rules of the general law. We will therefore now turn to the
conditions for implementing this type of sanction.
(2) Legal Interest Under
Section 272 C.P.A.
[101]
Section 272 C.P.A. provides that
“the consumer may demand, . . . subject to the other recourses
provided by this Act”. This wording raises the following question: Does the
consumer referred to in s. 272 C.P.A. have to be a natural person
who has a contractual relationship with a merchant or a manufacturer?
[102]
The C.P.A. does not expressly define the
consumer as a natural person who has entered into a contract governed by the
Act. According to s. 1(e) C.P.A., a consumer is “a natural
person, except a merchant who obtains goods or services for the purposes of his
business”. At first glance, therefore, it might be thought that the “consumer”
referred to in s. 272 C.P.A. need not have a contractual
relationship with a merchant or a manufacturer to be found to have the legal
interest required to institute proceedings under that provision. This view
appears to be reinforced by s. 217 C.P.A., which provides that
“[t]he fact that a prohibited practice has been used is not subordinate to
whether or not a contract has been made”. This is the gist of the position
taken by the appellant on this question (transcript, at pp. 26‑27).
[103]
This position is undeniably based on a large and
liberal conception of the role of consumer protection legislation, and
specifically that of s. 272 C.P.A. The case law of the Quebec
Court of Appeal confirms that such a conception is necessary to fully achieve
the legislature’s objectives in this area. For example, in Nichols, Gendreau J.A.
noted that s. 272 C.P.A. must be [translation] “interpreted liberally in
order to give full effect to this Act and ensure that it achieves its purpose
in a manner consistent with the principles that underlie it, while at the same
time complying with legal rules” (p. 750).
[104]
However, even a large and liberal principle of
interpretation cannot justify overlooking the rules that are laid down in the
Act to govern its application. One of those rules is found in s. 2 of the
Act, which determines the general scope of the C.P.A., providing that
“[t]his Act applies to every contract for goods or services entered into
between a consumer and a merchant in the course of his business”. Section 2
C.P.A. establishes the basic principle that a consumer contract must
exist for the Act to apply, except in the specific case of the Act’s penal
provisions. Professor Masse explains this as follows:
[translation]
Generally speaking, five conditions must be met for the C.P.A. to apply:
1
– A contract must be entered into by the parties;
2
– One of the parties to the contract must be a “consumer”;
3
– One of the parties must be a “merchant”;
4
– The “merchant” must be acting in the course of his or her business; and
5 – The contract must be for goods or
services. [p. 72]
[105]
If ss. 1(e) and 2 C.P.A. are
read together, it must be concluded that the recourse under s. 272 C.P.A.
is available only to natural persons who have entered into a contract governed
by the Act with a merchant or a manufacturer. A natural person who has not
entered into such a consumer contract cannot be considered a “consumer” within
the meaning of s. 272 C.P.A.
[106]
The fact that advertising companies are not
referred to in s. 272 C.P.A. also confirms that legal interest
under that provision depends on the existence of a contract to which the Act
applies. This legislative choice is no doubt attributable to the fact that
advertisers have no contractual relationship with consumers, so they are not in
a position to enrich themselves at the expense of consumers when they
contribute to the use of prohibited practices. In this context, it is not
surprising that the legislature has chosen not to make the recourse provided
for in s. 272 C.P.A. available to hold advertisers liable to
consumers for violations of the C.P.A.
[107]
Contrary to the appellant’s arguments, the
recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. is therefore not available
to a natural person who has not entered into a contract for goods or services
to which the Act applies with a merchant or a manufacturer. In this sense, the
fact that a natural person read a representation that constitutes a prohibited
practice is not enough for that person to have the legal interest required to
institute civil proceedings under that provision. As Professor Roy has noted,
only a natural person who has been the “victim” of a prohibited practice can
institute proceedings to have the practice sanctioned by a civil court
(p. 474). To be clear, this means that a consumer must have entered into
a contractual relationship with a merchant or a manufacturer to be able to
exercise the recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. against the
person who engaged in the prohibited practice.
[108]
Nevertheless, there is an important point with
regard to legal interest that needs to be clarified. A consumer contract is
not necessarily formed at the precise time when the consumer purchases or
obtains goods or services. In Quebec civil law, a contract is formed when the
acceptance of an offer to contract is received by the offeror (art. 1387 C.C.Q.).
If a representation concerning goods or services constitutes an offer under
civil law rules, it can be concluded, subject to the formal requirements
imposed by the C.P.A. on the undertakings to which it applies, that a
consumer contract is formed at the moment when a merchant or one of the
merchant’s employees receives from a consumer the manifestation of his or her
wish to accept that offer. However, s. 54.1 C.P.A. provides that every
distance contract is deemed to be entered into at the consumer’s address.
Although the consumer’s acceptance of the offer must always be assessed
contextually, it remains distinct from the conclusion of the juridical
operation envisaged by the parties (art. 1386 C.C.Q.). The
performance of prestations does not coincide with, but rather results from, the
formation of the contract.
[109]
Despite the limits to which the recourse
provided for in s. 272 are subject as a result of the rules on the legal
interest required by the C.P.A., it must be borne in mind that the Act
provides for other recourses for its enforcement.
[110]
In the instant case, whether the sending of a reply
coupon (or the receipt of the coupon by the respondents) resulted in the
formation of a contract for participation in a sweepstakes could be debated at
length. Was it impossible for a contract to be formed because there was no
agreement on its object within the meaning of art. 1412 C.C.Q.?
Did the parties enter into a contract and, if so, could it be annulled owing to
the respondents’ fraud? At the very least, the parties entered into a contract
for a subscription to Time magazine. In this Court, the respondents
emphasized the fact that, according to the Superior Court, the appellant
understood that participating in the sweepstakes and subscribing to the
magazine were separate undertakings. When the question is whether a consumer
has the interest required to institute proceedings under s. 272 C.P.A.,
however, the two undertakings are linked. Logically, one depends on the
other. Moreover, a contract for a magazine subscription is a contract to which
the C.P.A. applies. As a result, in these circumstances, the appellant
had the interest required to take action against the respondents and his action
was properly brought.
(3) Remedies Available Under
Section 272 C.P.A.
[111]
The recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
must be exercised in accordance with the specific principles governing consumer
law in Quebec and, where applicable, the general rules of the civil law. We
must now explain how these principles relate to the application of s. 272 C.P.A.
(a)
Contractual Remedies
[112]
Subject to the other recourses provided for in
the C.P.A., a consumer with the necessary legal interest can institute
proceedings under s. 272 C.P.A. to have the court sanction a
failure by a merchant or a manufacturer to fulfil an obligation imposed on the
merchant or manufacturer by the C.P.A., by the regulations made under
the C.P.A. or by a voluntary undertaking. The Court of Appeal has
correctly confirmed that the recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
is based on the premise that any failure to fulfil an obligation imposed by the
Act gives rise to an absolute presumption of prejudice to the consumer. In Nichols,
Gendreau J.A. stressed that [translation] “a merchant sued under
s. 272 cannot have the action dismissed by raising the defence that the
consumer suffered no prejudice” (p. 749). The
recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. thus differs from the one
provided for in s. 271 C.P.A. Section 271 C.P.A. sanctions
the violation of certain rules governing the formation of consumer contracts,
whereas the purpose of s. 272 C.P.A. is not simply to sanction
violations of formal requirements of the Act, but to sanction all violations
that are prejudicial to the consumer (Boissonneault v. Banque de Montréal,
[1988] R.J.Q. 2622 (C.A.)).
[113]
There are basically two types of obligations
that can result in a sanction under s. 272 C.P.A. if not
fulfilled. First, the C.P.A. imposes a range of statutory contractual
obligations on merchants and manufacturers that are set out primarily in
Title I of the Act. Proof that one of these substantive rules has been
violated entitles a consumer, without having to meet any additional
requirements, to obtain one of the contractual remedies provided for in
s. 272 C.P.A. As Rousseau‑Houle J.A. stated in Beauchamp,
[translation] “[t]he legislature
has adopted an absolute presumption that a failure by the merchant or
manufacturer to fulfil any of these obligations causes prejudice to the
consumer, and it has provided the consumer with the range of recourses set out
in s. 272” (p. 744). It is up to the consumer to choose the remedy,
but the court has the discretion to award another one that is more appropriate
in the circumstances (L’Heureux and Lacoursière, at p. 621). Unlike
s. 271 C.P.A., s. 272 does not permit the merchant to raise
the defence that the consumer suffered no prejudice where violations of Title I
are in issue (L’Heureux and Lacoursière, at p. 620; Service aux
marchands détaillants ltée (Household Finance) v. Option Consommateurs,
2006 QCCA 1319 (CanLII)).
[114]
Second, Title II of the C.P.A.
imposes obligations on merchants, manufacturers and advertisers that apply to
them regardless of whether a consumer contract referred to in s. 2 of the
Act exists. Unlike the obligations imposed under Title I of the Act,
which apply to the contractual phase, the prohibitions against certain business
practices set out in Title II apply to the pre‑contractual phase.
As Françoise Lebeau notes, Title II of the C.P.A. imposes on
merchants, manufacturers and advertisers a duty to act honestly and an
obligation to provide information during the period preceding the formation of
the contract (p. 1020). The legislature’s objective with respect to
business practices is clear: to ensure the veracity of pre‑contractual
representations in order to prevent a consumer’s consent from being vitiated by
inadequate, fraudulent or improper information.
[115]
In the case of prohibited practices, some judges
and authors have asserted that the contractual remedies provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
are available to a consumer only if the consumer has suffered prejudice as a
result of an unlawful act committed by a merchant or a manufacturer (see Ata
v. 9118‑8169 Québec Inc., 2006 QCCS 3777, [2006]
R.J.Q. 1883). For advocates of this view, the
contravention of a provision of Title II of the C.P.A. does not
give rise to an irrebuttable presumption of prejudice, since s. 272 C.P.A.
is intended only to sanction unlawful acts that have actually deceived a
consumer (see also Lluelles and Moore, at p. 312). This view corresponds
in substance to the position taken by the respondents in the case at bar (R.F.,
at para. 57).
[116]
According to this approach, a court cannot award
a consumer one of the contractual remedies provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
if the merchant, after publishing a misleading advertisement in the pre‑contractual
phase, gave corrected information directly to the consumer just before they
entered into the contract. Since such behaviour merely constitutes [translation] “fraud
that has been uncovered and is not prejudicial”, it
cannot give rise to these specific remedies (L. Nahmiash, “Le recours
collectif et la Loi sur la protection du consommateur: le dol éclairé
et non préjudiciable — l’apparence de droit illusoire”, in Développements
récents sur les recours collectifs (2004), 75).
[117]
In our opinion, this position minimizes the
influence that misleading advertising can have on a consumer’s decision to
enter into a contractual relationship with a merchant. It suggests that an
advertisement cannot have a fraudulent effect if the consumer discovers that it
is misleading a few minutes before entering into a contract with a merchant.
This concept of “fraudulent effect” is too restrictive for the objectives of
the recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. to be achieved. It does
not accurately reflect the way consumers are often invited to give their
consent in such situations.
[118]
To say that advertising can place consumers
under a merchant’s influence is an understatement. Very often, advertising
stimulates the interest of consumers and induces them to go in person to the
merchant’s premises to learn more about the product or service being promoted.
Their decision‑making process begins at that time: they consider
purchasing a good or service on the basis of the representations made in the
advertisement. And then the consumer becomes more vulnerable once he or she is
on the merchant’s premises.
[119]
In absolute terms, there is nothing
reprehensible about a merchant’s use of representations and insistence to
induce the customer to give in. Such acts are normal and inevitable in an
economic system based on free competition. But this is not true where the
consumer is lured by false or misleading advertising, even if the merchant
“corrects” the information in a one‑on‑one discussion just before
they conclude the contract. Of course, a rigid interpretation of the rules of
contract formation may lead to the conclusion that the consumer’s consent is
nonetheless free and informed if he or she discovers the misleading nature of
an advertisement before entering into the contract. However, a view more in
keeping with the social significance of the C.P.A. would lead to the
conclusion that the consumer’s decision to enter into a contractual
relationship with the merchant was fundamentally tainted by the misleading
advertisement.
[120]
It would be hard to deny that such a
“correction” of misleading information often occurs late in the contract
formation process. For example, the members of the group covered by the
class action in Brault & Martineau learned that they had to pay the
sales taxes only once they were at the cash, that is, after they had discussed
the payment and financing terms with a salesperson and after a purchase order
had been issued (Sup. Ct., at paras. 29‑30;
see also Chartier v. Meubles Léon ltée, 2003 CanLII 7749 (Que. Sup. Ct.)).
The correction might thus be made after the
consumer has in fact consented to purchase the product in question. In such
circumstances, the prohibited practice clearly plays a role in inducing the
consumer to enter into a contractual relationship on the basis of misleading
information.
[121]
For this reason, the argument that s. 272 C.P.A.
is intended solely to sanction prohibited practices that have actually resulted
in fraud improperly underemphasizes the prejudice resulting from a violation of
a provision of Title II of the Act. It effectively introduces a variable
rule. On the one hand, in cases in which the presumption of fraud provided for
in s. 253 C.P.A. applies, this rule would allow a merchant or a
manufacturer to raise the defence that the consumer suffered no prejudice.
Section 253 C.P.A. creates a presumption that, had the consumer
been aware of certain prohibited practices, he or she would not have agreed to
the contract or would not have paid as high a price. On the other hand, where
the presumption does not apply, the rule would require consumers to fully prove
the prejudice they have suffered. There is no reason why consumers should bear
a higher burden of proof where the breach of a statutory obligation falls under
Title II of the Act rather than under Title I and the presumption of s.
253 C.P.A. does not apply. Neither the wording of s. 272 C.P.A.
nor the philosophy underlying the application of the Act warrants such a
conclusion, which could also dangerously pave the way for acceptance of the
concept of “bon dol” (harmless fraud) in consumer law. As we will
explain below, this position is based on a misconception of the role of
s. 253 C.P.A.
[122]
This interpretation also leads to strange
results. The presumption in s. 253 C.P.A. does not apply to all
prohibited business practices. For reasons of its own, the legislature has
chosen to list the practices that are covered by the presumption of fraud
established in that provision. Where s. 253 does not apply, a consumer
claiming to be the victim of a prohibited practice would be able to sue under
s. 272 C.P.A. but would have to use the rules of the Civil Code
of Québec to justify the application of the contractual remedies in that
section. If we disregard the question of punitive damages, the recourse
provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. would thus be of no real use to the
consumer. With this in mind, it cannot be assumed that the legislature
intended the implementation of s. 272 to be subject to the application of
s. 253 C.P.A.
[123]
We greatly prefer the position taken by
Fish J.A. in Turgeon, namely that a prohibited practice does not
create a presumption that a merchant has committed fraud but in itself constitutes
fraud within the meaning of art. 1401 C.C.Q. (para. 48). This
position is consistent with the spirit of the Act and is also more consistent
with the case law relating to failures to fulfil the obligations imposed by
Title I of the Act. In our opinion, the use of a prohibited practice can
give rise to an absolute presumption of prejudice. As a result, a consumer
does not have to prove fraud and its consequences on the basis of the ordinary
rules of the civil law for the contractual remedies provided for in s. 272
C.P.A. to be available. As well, a merchant or manufacturer who is sued
cannot raise a defence based on [translation] “fraud that has been
uncovered and is not prejudicial”. The severity of the
sanctions provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. is not variable: the
irrebuttable presumption of prejudice can apply to all violations of the
obligations imposed by the Act.
[124]
This absolute presumption of prejudice
presupposes a rational connection between the prohibited practice and the
contractual relationship governed by the Act. It is therefore important to
define the requirements that must be met for the presumption to apply in cases
in which a prohibited practice has been used. In our opinion, a consumer who
wishes to benefit from the presumption must prove the following: (1) that
the merchant or manufacturer failed to fulfil one of the obligations imposed by
Title II of the Act; (2) that the consumer saw the representation
that constituted a prohibited practice; (3) that the consumer’s seeing
that representation resulted in the formation, amendment or performance of a
consumer contract; and (4) that a sufficient nexus existed between the
content of the representation and the goods or services covered by the
contract. This last requirement means that the prohibited practice must be one
that was capable of influencing a consumer’s behaviour with respect to the
formation, amendment or performance of the contract. Where these four
requirements are met, the court can conclude that the prohibited practice is
deemed to have had a fraudulent effect on the consumer. In such a case, the
contract so formed, amended or performed constitutes, in itself, a prejudice
suffered by the consumer. This presumption thus enables the consumer to
demand, in the manner described above, one of the contractual remedies provided
for in s. 272 C.P.A.
(b) Compensatory
Damages
[125]
Where a merchant or a manufacturer fails to
fulfil an obligation to which s. 272 C.P.A. applies, the consumer
can ask the court for an award of compensatory damages. The respondents argue
that the recourse in compensatory damages is available only if the court awards
one of the contractual remedies provided for in s. 272(a) to (f)
C.P.A. (R.F., at para. 72). This argument is without merit.
Section 272 C.P.A. contains the words “without prejudice to his
claim in damages, in all cases”. This phrase, which is in no way ambiguous,
means that the recourse in damages, regardless of whether it is contractual or
extracontractual in nature, is not dependent on the specific contractual
remedies set out in s. 272(a) to (f). By using these words
in s. 272 C.P.A., the legislature intended to leave consumers free
to choose the sanctions they consider appropriate to repair any prejudice they
suffer.
[126]
Nevertheless, the independence of the recourse
in damages provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. does not mean that there
is no legal framework for exercising it. First of all, the recourse in
damages, regardless of whether it is based on a breach of contract or a fault,
must be exercised in accordance with the rule concerning the legal interest
required to institute proceedings under that provision. Next, where a consumer
chooses to claim damages from the merchant or manufacturer he or she is suing,
the exercise of the recourse is subject to the general rules of Quebec civil
law. In particular, an award of compensatory damages can be obtained only if
the prejudice suffered can be assessed or quantified.
[127]
The use by a merchant or a manufacturer of a
prohibited practice can also form the basis of a claim for extracontractual
compensatory damages under s. 272 C.P.A. A majority of the Quebec
authors and judges who have considered this issue have taken the view that
fraud committed during the pre‑contractual phase is a civil fault that
can give rise to extracontractual liability (Lluelles and Moore, at
p. 321; Kingsway Financial Services Inc. v. 118997 Canada inc., 1999 CanLII 13530 (Que. C.A.)). Proof of
fraud thus establishes civil fault. However, because of the specific nature of
the C.P.A., the procedure for proving fraud is different from the one
under the Civil Code of Québec.
[128]
This difference stems from the fact that, where
the recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. is available to a
consumer, his or her burden of proof is eased because of the absolute
presumption of prejudice that results from any unlawful act committed by the merchant
or manufacturer. This presumption means that the consumer does not have to
prove that the merchant intended to mislead, as would be required in a civil
law fraud case. According to the interpretation proposed by Fish J.A. in Turgeon,
a consumer to whom the irrebuttable presumption of prejudice applies has also
succeeded in proving the fault of the merchant or manufacturer for the purposes
of s. 272 C.P.A. The court can thus award the consumer damages to
compensate for any prejudice resulting from that extracontractual fault.
(4) Issue of the Interplay Between
Sections 253 and 272 C.P.A.
[129]
However, the role of s. 253 C.P.A.
in cases in which the recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A. is
exercised raises an important issue of statutory interpretation. A brief
review of some of the academic literature makes it apparent that there are a
variety of viewpoints on this issue. Section 253 C.P.A. reads as
follows:
253. Where
a merchant, manufacturer or advertiser makes use of a prohibited practice in case
of the sale, lease or construction of an immovable or, in any other case, of a
prohibited practice referred to in paragraph a or b of section
220, a, b, c, d, e or g of
section 221, d, e or f of section 222, c
of section 224 or a or b of section 225, or in
section 227, 228, 229, 237 or 239, it is presumed that had the consumer
been aware of such practice, he would not have agreed to the contract or would
not have paid such a high price.
[130]
As we have seen, Professor L’Heureux has long
maintained that the presumption provided for in s. 253 C.P.A. shows
that s. 272 C.P.A. is not intended to be used to sanction
prohibited business practices. In her view, consumers who claim to be victims
of prohibited practices must instead turn to the general law or to ss. 8
and 9 C.P.A. to obtain a finding that their consent has been vitiated.
Sections 8 and 9 C.P.A. read as follows:
8. The
consumer may demand the nullity of a contract or a reduction in his obligations
thereunder where the disproportion between the respective obligations of the
parties is so great as to amount to exploitation of the consumer or where the
obligation of the consumer is excessive, harsh or unconscionable.
9. Where
the court must determine whether a consumer consented to a contract, it shall
consider the condition of the parties, the circumstances in which the contract
was entered into and the benefits arising from the contract for the consumer.
[131]
Another view, voiced by Professors Lluelles and
Moore among others, is that the presence of s. 253 C.P.A. at the
end of Title II precludes the argument that the absolute presumption of
prejudice applicable to violations of Title I also applies in the context of
proceedings based on the use of a prohibited practice (Lluelles and Moore, at
p. 312). The respondents rely on both of these views.
[132]
In our opinion, these two positions are wrong in
suggesting that the role of s. 253 C.P.A. can be considered solely
in relation to the statutory recourse provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
There is no direct relationship between these two statutory provisions:
each of them makes its own contribution to the achievement of the legislature’s
social and legal objectives. The presumption of fraud provided for in
s. 253 C.P.A. does not delimit the scope of s. 272 C.P.A.
or govern the principles that underlie the application of that section; rather,
it provides consumers with additional protection in situations in which they do
not wish or are not able to exercise a recourse under s. 272 C.P.A.
The primary purpose of s. 253 C.P.A. is to ease the burden of proof
for consumers who choose to sue a merchant, a manufacturer or an advertiser
under the ordinary rules of the general law. In such cases, s. 253
relieves consumers of the obligation to prove that the fraud was determinative
in inducing them to give their consent. A rule of evidence such as this is
helpful to consumers who want to sue advertisers under the general law, since
they cannot take action against advertisers under s. 272 C.P.A.
[133]
This conclusion is dictated not only by the
characteristics of s. 272 C.P.A. itself, but also by the express
reference in s. 253 C.P.A. to contracts relating to immovables.
Although s. 6.1 C.P.A. provides that the provisions of
Title II of the Act apply to such contracts, it is impossible to sanction
prohibited practices involving immovables under s. 272 C.P.A. For
this reason, aggrieved consumers will logically turn to the fraud provisions of
the Civil Code of Québec (arts. 1401 and 1407 C.C.Q.). The
whole rationale for the presumption provided for in s. 253 C.P.A.
can therefore be found in this area (Turgeon, at para. 40).
[134]
It must not be forgotten that the application of
the C.P.A. is not dependent on the exercise of one of the civil or penal
recourses for which it provides. The C.P.A. applies to any legal
situation covered by s. 2 of the Act, and not solely to civil or penal
proceedings instituted under the Act.
[135]
For the purposes of this appeal, we need not
extend the discussion of the relationship between s. 253 C.P.A. and
s. 272 C.P.A. to include a review of ss. 8 and 9 C.P.A.
This being said, the assertion that [translation]
“[m]isleading advertising makes the recourse under sections 8 and 9
available, with or without the presumption of fraud of section 253”, may
have to be approached with caution (L’Heureux, Droit de la consommation,
at p. 235). In Quebec civil law, lesion and fraud are two different
defects of consent. Fraud does not necessarily involve exploitation of the
consumer and, as a result, lesion. In this respect, it is important that the C.P.A.
be interpreted in accordance with general principles of civil law obligations.
(5) Role of Section 217 C.P.A.
[136]
We must now clarify the role of s. 217 C.P.A.,
which provides that “[t]he fact that a prohibited practice has been used is not
subordinate to whether or not a contract has been made”. The Court of Appeal
suggested that this provision makes the C.P.A. applicable
once a prohibited practice is used, regardless of whether a consumer contract
is entered into as a result of that practice (para. 25).
However, it is important not to confuse the question of the existence of a
prohibited practice with the question of interest under s. 272 C.P.A.
[137]
Title II of the C.P.A. prohibits
certain types of representations made “to a consumer”. The definition of
“consumer” in s. 1(e) of the Act might suggest that the provisions
of Title II apply only where a consumer enters into a contract as a result
of the use of a prohibited practice. However, the prohibitions relating to
business practices also apply on a preventive basis, that is, before an
unlawful representation dupes one or more consumers by fraudulently inducing
them to enter into contractual relationships. This is why s. 217 C.P.A.
exists: its purpose is to make it easier to sanction violations of the Act on
a preventive basis by specifying that a merchant’s representation may
constitute a prohibited practice even if none of the natural persons targeted
by the advertisement entered into a contract as a result of the advertisement.
It is enough that the advertisement target a [translation]
“potential consumer” (L’Heureux and Lacoursière, at p. 489).
[138]
Therefore, s. 217 C.P.A. relates
strictly to the existence of a prohibited practice. It authorizes the
Director of Criminal and Penal Prosecutions to enforce the Act on a preventive
basis, in keeping with the legislature’s intention. As Professor Masse
explains,
[translation] [t]his provision
authorizes penal proceedings where provisions of Title II have been
contravened but no contract has been entered into as a result of a violation of
the C.P.A. It is as a result possible to prove that an advertisement is misleading
and to institute penal proceedings against the offender even where no contract
was entered into with one or more consumers as a result of the advertisement.
[p. 827]
[139]
The applicability of the penal provisions is
governed by a specific rule: s. 277 C.P.A. provides that an
offence is committed where, inter alia, a person contravenes the
Act. This rule, which constitutes a departure from s. 2 of the Act, can
be explained by the fact that penal proceedings are instituted in the general
interest. Thus, the purpose of such proceedings is not to protect the private
interests of one or more consumers, but to protect the public in general from
business practices that may be misleading. On the other hand, the general rule
set out in s. 2 C.P.A. necessarily applies where consumers apply
for the protection of the Act (Masse, at pp. 28‑29), for example,
when they seek to avail themselves of the recourses provided for in s. 272
C.P.A. Therefore, s. 217 C.P.A. is not intended to govern
the conditions under which the recourses provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
are available and can be exercised. The principles that apply to s. 217 C.P.A.
are different from those that apply to s. 272 C.P.A., and the two
provisions have different roles in the scheme of the C.P.A.
(6) Application of the Principles to This
Appeal
[140]
The appellant has not asked for any contractual
remedies in this case. He is instead seeking the equivalent of
US$1 million in damages. Although his motion to institute proceedings is
unclear in this respect, it became apparent as the case progressed that this
amount is mainly for punitive damages and also includes an incidental amount
for an extracontractual claim. We must begin by determining whether the
appellant has established the respondents’ extracontractual liability on the
basis of the principles discussed above.
[141]
To establish the respondents’ extracontractual
liability, the appellant had to show that they had engaged in a prohibited
practice. He then had to prove that he had seen the representation constituting
a prohibited practice before the contract was formed, amended or performed and
that a sufficient nexus existed between the representation and the goods or
services covered by the contract. If these facts were proven, the absolute
presumption of prejudice would apply and the respondents’ extracontractual
liability would be triggered for the purposes of s. 272 C.P.A. The
appellant did prove this. We have already found that the respondents
contravened ss. 219 and 228 C.P.A. Whether the appellant saw the
representations in question does not present any problems, since it is common
ground that he subscribed to Time magazine after reading the
documentation the respondents had sent him. Finally, there is no doubt that a
sufficient nexus existed between the content of the Document and Time
magazine: not only did the Document promote the magazine directly, but the
trial judge found that the appellant would not have subscribed to the magazine
had he not read the misleading documentation (para. 49). As a result, we
find that the appellant has discharged his burden of proving a sufficient nexus
between the prohibited practices engaged in by the respondents and his
subscription contract with the respondents. This means that for the purposes
of s. 272 C.P.A., the Document is deemed to have had a fraudulent
effect on the appellant’s decision to subscribe to Time magazine. The
conduct of the respondents that is in issue constitutes a civil fault.
[142]
The trial judge found that the respondents’
fault had caused moral injuries to the appellant and awarded him $1,000 in
compensatory damages. In this Court, the respondents have not shown that the
trial judge erred in assessing the evidence or in applying the legal principles
with regard either to their liability or to the quantum of damages. There is
no reason for this Court to interfere with those findings. The appeal will
accordingly be allowed to restore this part of the trial judge’s judgment.
E. Did the Trial Judge Err in Awarding the Appellant
Punitive Damages?
[143]
In this part of our reasons, we must define the
legal principles and tests that govern the admissibility of a recourse in
punitive damages under s. 272 C.P.A. and the determination of the
quantum of such damages. These questions of law will of course be considered
on the basis of the trial judge’s findings of fact, unless palpable and
overriding errors were made in assessing the facts (Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235, at paras. 25
and 37; H.L. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 SCC 25, [2005]
1 S.C.R. 401).
(1) Independent Nature of Punitive
Damages
[144]
The respondents argue in their factum that a
claim for punitive damages under s. 272 C.P.A., like a claim for
compensatory damages, is admissible only if one of the contractual remedies
provided for in s. 272(a) to (f) is awarded at the same time
(R.F., at para. 91). They submit that the trial judge erred in ordering
them to pay punitive damages, because she had not awarded the appellant any of
the remedies provided for in s. 272(a) to (f) C.P.A.
In our opinion, the respondents’ argument is wrong in law and must fail.
[145]
First of all, as with compensatory damages, we
must take account of the actual wording of s. 272 C.P.A., which
clearly states that consumers who exercise a recourse under that section “may also claim punitive damages”. As we explained above,
this confirms that the legislature intended to allow consumers who exercise a
recourse under s. 272 C.P.A. to choose between a number of remedies
capable of correcting the effects of the violation of the rights conferred on
them by the Act. Consumers who exercise the recourse provided for in
s. 272 C.P.A. can therefore choose to claim contractual
remedies, compensatory damages and punitive damages or to claim just one of
those remedies. It will then be up to the trial judge to award the remedies he
or she considers appropriate in the circumstances.
[146]
Moreover, our interpretation is consistent with
the one adopted by this Court in de Montigny v. Brossard (Succession),
2010 SCC 51, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 64. In that case, the Court stated that
s. 49, para. 2 of the Charter of human rights and freedoms, R.S.Q.,
c. C-12 (“Quebec Charter”) creates an independent and
distinct right to claim punitive damages. In its decision, the Court accepted
(at para. 40) the opinion expressed by L’Heureux-Dubé J., dissenting
in part, in Béliveau St‑Jacques v. Fédération des employées et
employés de services publics inc., [1996] 2 S.C.R. 345, at
para. 62, that the words “in addition” in s. 49, para. 2 of the Quebec
Charter
simply mean that a court can not
only award compensatory damages but can “in addition”, or equally, as
well, moreover, also (see the definition of “en outre” in Le
Grand Robert de la langue française (1986), vol. 6), grant a request
for exemplary damages. The latter type of damages is therefore not dependent
on the former. [Emphasis in original.]
According to
LeBel J. in de Montigny, “[t]he solution adopted by L’Heureux‑Dubé J.
seems in fact to be the appropriate one in cases where,
as here, the imperative of preserving government compensation systems is not
part of the legal context” (para. 42). These comments are also applicable
in the instant case.
[147]
Consumers can be awarded punitive damages under
s. 272 C.P.A. even if they are not awarded contractual remedies or
compensatory damages at the same time. This means that there was nothing to
prevent the trial judge from ordering the respondents to pay punitive damages.
(2) General Criteria for Awarding
Punitive Damages
(a) Heterogeneous Nature of the Criteria
in Quebec Civil Law
[148]
The respondents argue that, even if this Court
finds that the appellant has the legal interest required to claim punitive
damages, such damages cannot be awarded on the facts of this case. The
respondents urge the Court to accept that an award of punitive damages under
s. 272 C.P.A. is appropriate only if the conduct of the merchant or
manufacturer was in bad faith or malicious (R.F., at para. 133). They
rely in this regard on this Court’s reasons in several decisions rendered in
cases concerning the common law: Hill v. Church of Scientology of Toronto,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 1130, Vorvis v. Insurance Corporation of British
Columbia, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1085, and Whiten v. Pilot Insurance Co., 2002 SCC
18, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 595. In our opinion, this argument is wrong and must fail.
[149]
To begin with, the decisions of this Court upon
which the respondents rely were rendered in tort cases at common law. But the
conditions for claiming punitive damages are approached very differently in
Quebec civil law and at common law. At common law, punitive damages can be
awarded in any civil suit in which the plaintiff proves that the defendant’s
conduct was “malicious, oppressive and high‑handed
[such] that it offends the court’s sense of decency”: Hill,
at para. 196. The requirement that the plaintiff demonstrate
misconduct that represents a marked departure from ordinary standards of
decency ensures that punitive damages will be awarded only in exceptional cases
(Whiten, at para. 36).
[150]
In Quebec civil law, this test has not been adopted
in its entirety. Punitive damages are an exceptional remedy in the civil law,
too. Article 1621 C.C.Q. provides that they can be awarded only
where this is provided for by law. The Civil Code of Québec does not
create a general scheme for awarding punitive damages and does not establish a
right to this remedy in all circumstances :
1621.
Where the awarding of punitive damages is provided for by law, the
amount of such damages may not exceed what is sufficient to fulfil their
preventive purpose.
As a result, [translation] “punitive damages must be denied where there is no enabling
enactment” (J.-L. Baudouin and P. Deslauriers, La responsabilité
civile (7th ed. 2007), vol. I, Principes généraux, at
para. 1‑364; see also Béliveau St‑Jacques, at
para. 20). The Quebec legislature thus intended to leave it to specific
statutes to identify situations in which punitive damages can be awarded and,
in some cases, establish the requirements for awarding them or rules for
calculating them. Article 1621 C.C.Q. plays only a suppletive role
by establishing a general principle for awarding such damages and by
identifying their purpose.
[151]
The legislature has thus retained greater
flexibility in structuring specific schemes for awarding punitive damages. A
review of Quebec legislation containing provisions that authorize awards of
punitive damages confirms the flexibility and variability of the rules
applicable to such damages in Quebec law. On the one hand, the enabling
provisions take a variety of forms. Not all of them require proof that the act
was malicious, oppressive or high‑handed, which is required at all times
at common law. For example, a violation of s. 1 of the Tree Protection Act, R.S.Q., c. P‑37,
automatically entails the payment of punitive damages. As well, art. 1899
C.C.Q., s. 56 of the Act respecting prearranged funeral services
and sepultures, R.S.Q., c. A‑23.001, and,
of particular relevance in this appeal, s. 272 of the C.P.A. do not
explicitly require malicious or high‑handed conduct.
[152]
On the other hand, the legislature does
sometimes provide that malicious conduct or intentional fault must be proven in
order to obtain punitive damages. Some examples are (1) s. 49 of the
Quebec Charter (unlawful and intentional interference);
(2) s. 167 of the Act respecting access to documents held by
public bodies and the protection of personal information, R.S.Q., c. A‑2.1
(gross neglect or intentional infringement); (3) arts. 1968 and 1902 C.C.Q.
(bad faith or harassment); and (4) s. 67 of the Petroleum Products Act, R.S.Q.,
c. P‑30.01 (abusive and unreasonable
business practice). If the Hill
test were applicable by default in Quebec civil law as proposed by the
respondents (R.F., at paras. 133‑36), it would be very difficult to
explain the legislature’s decision to insert the equivalent of that test into
various statutes.
[153]
Thus, unlike in the common law, there is no
unified scheme for awarding punitive damages in Quebec civil law. Moreover, it
cannot be argued that there is a traditional rule in Quebec civil law to the
effect that only malicious misconduct can result in an award of such damages.
(b) Factors to Consider in Developing Criteria for Awarding
Punitive Damages
[154]
In this legislative context, in view of the silence of the Act, the
criteria for awarding punitive damages must be established by taking account of
the general objectives of punitive damages and those of the legislation in
question.
[155]
Article 1621 C.C.Q. itself requires
that the general objectives of punitive damages be taken into account. It
indicates that punitive damages are essentially preventive. Under it, the
ultimate objective of an award of punitive damages must always be to prevent
the repetition of undesirable conduct. This Court has held that the preventive
purpose of punitive damages is fulfilled if such damages are awarded where an
individual has engaged in conduct the repetition of which must be prevented, or
that must be denounced, in the specific circumstances of the case in question (Béliveau
St‑Jacques, at paras. 21 and 126; de Montigny, at
para. 53). Where a court chooses to punish a wrongdoer for misconduct,
its decision indicates to the wrongdoer that he or she will face consequences
both for that instance of misconduct and for any repetition of it. An award of
punitive damages is based primarily on the principle of deterrence and is
intended to discourage the repetition of similar conduct both by the wrongdoer
and in society. The award thus serves the purpose of specific and general
deterrence. In addition, the principle of denunciation may justify an award
where the trier of fact wants to emphasize that the act is particularly
reprehensible in the opinion of the justice system. This denunciatory function
also helps ensure that the preventive purpose of punitive damages is fulfilled
effectively.
[156]
The need to also consider the objectives of the
legislation in question is justified by the fact that the right to seek
punitive damages in Quebec civil law always depends on a specific legislative
provision. As well, punitive damages in their current form are not intended to
sanction generally every act prohibited by law. Rather, their purpose is to
protect the integrity of a legislative scheme by sanctioning any act that is
incompatible with the objectives the legislature was pursuing in enacting the
statute in question. The types of conduct whose repetition needs to be
prevented and the legislature’s objectives are determined on the basis of the
statute under which a sanction is sought.
[157]
In practice, to discharge its obligation to take
the above‑mentioned objectives into account, the court must identify the
types of conduct that are incompatible with the objectives the legislature was
pursuing in enacting the statute in question and that interfere with the
achievement of those objectives. Punitive damages can be awarded only for
those types of conduct.
(3) Criteria for Awarding Punitive
Damages Under Section 272 C.P.A.
[158]
Under s. 272 C.P.A., punitive
damages can be sought only if it is proved that an obligation resulting from
the Act has not been fulfilled. However, s. 272 establishes no criteria
or rules for awarding such damages. It is thus necessary to refer to
art. 1621 C.C.Q. and determine what criteria for awarding punitive
damages would suffice to enable s. 272 C.P.A. to fulfil its
function.
[159]
The objectives of the Act must therefore be
identified to ensure that punitive damages will indeed meet the objectives of
art. 1621 C.C.Q.
(a) Objectives
of the C.P.A.
[160]
The C.P.A.’s first objective is to
restore the balance in the contractual relationship between merchants and
consumers (Roy, at p. 466; L’Heureux and Lacoursière, at pp. 25‑26).
This rebalancing is necessary because the bargaining power of consumers is
weaker than that of merchants both when they enter into contracts and when
problems arise in the course of their contractual relationships. It is also
necessary because of the risk of informational vulnerability consumers face at
every step in their relations with merchants. In sum, the obligations imposed on
merchants and the formal requirements for contracts to which the Act applies
are intended to restore the balance between the respective contractual powers
of merchants and consumers (L’Heureux and Lacoursière, at pp. 26‑31).
[161]
The C.P.A.’s second objective is to
eliminate unfair and misleading practices that may distort the information
available to consumers and prevent them from making informed choices (L’Heureux
and Lacoursière, at pp. 479 et seq.). Most of the measures imposed
by the legislature to achieve this objective are found in Title II of the C.P.A.,
which we discussed above.
[162]
The legislature’s intention in pursuing these
two objectives is to secure the existence of an efficient market in which
consumers can participate confidently.
(b) Differences of Opinion Among Judges
About the Criteria for Awarding Punitive Damages Under the C.P.A.
[163]
The criteria to be
applied in awarding punitive damages under the C.P.A. are not at all
clear from the decisions of the Quebec courts. Sharply conflicting positions
can be found both in the case law and in the academic literature. We will
discuss these positions before proposing a test for implementing the recourse
in punitive damages.
[164]
According to one of these positions, proof of
conduct that is intentional or in bad faith, or of gross fault or similar
behaviour, is necessary. The Quebec Court of Appeal has rejected this approach
for more than a decade now (see Lambert v. Minerve Canada, compagnie de
transport aérien inc., [1998] R.J.Q. 1740 (C.A.), and, more recently, Brault
& Martineau (C.A.), at para. 44). However, it would seem that
some judges have nevertheless continued to require such proof (see, e.g., Lafontaine v. La Source d’eau Val‑d’Or
inc., 2001 CanLII 10566
(C.Q.), at paras. 50‑51;
Jabraian v. Trévi Fabrication Inc., 2005 CanLII 10580 (C.Q.), at
para. 31; Santangeli v. 154995 Canada Inc., 2005 CanLII 32103
(C.Q.), at paras. 34‑35; Martin v. Rénovations métropolitaines
(Québec) ltée, 2006 QCCQ 1760 (CanLII), at para. 75; Darveau v.
9034‑9770 Québec inc., 2005 CanLII 41136 (C.Q.), at
para. 123).
[165]
This position is inconsistent with the
objectives of the C.P.A. The burden of proof it imposes would not
contribute to changing the conduct of merchants and manufacturers. This
interpretation of the Act would not encourage merchants and manufacturers to
fulfil the obligations imposed on them by the C.P.A. Instead, it might
suggest to them that they do not have to worry about complying with the Act as
long as their violations are not particularly serious. L’Heureux and
Lacoursière note that the requirement of bad faith could sterilize the
implementation of the Act, so they propose a test based on conduct [translation] “that goes beyond what is
normal” (p. 630).
[166]
According to the second position, a finding that
an obligation imposed by the C.P.A. has not been fulfilled is in itself
sufficient to justify an award of punitive damages.
Duval Hesler J.A. (as she then was) took this position in Brault
& Martineau (C.A.):
[translation] In my opinion, and at the
risk of repeating myself, the existence of an unlawful business practice, such
as advertising that does not meet the requirements of the CPA, in itself
justifies an award of punitive damages. [Emphasis added; para. 45.]
[167]
This position lies at the other end of the
spectrum of solutions contemplated by the courts. Such a strict, if not
automatic, application of s. 272 C.P.A. is not necessary to achieve
the legislature’s objectives.
[168]
It is true that consumers should be encouraged
to enforce their rights under the C.P.A. This does not necessarily mean
that court proceedings must always be instituted for this purpose or that
informal methods of dispute resolution cannot be considered first. It seems to
us that the commencement of proceedings implies the failure of attempts by a
consumer and a merchant or manufacturer to resolve their disagreement
informally. The rule advocated by Duval Hesler J.A. would make an
informal resolution less appealing and would encourage the indiscriminate
judicialization of disputes that might have been resolved differently.
Punitive damages would then be awarded in circumstances in which doing so would
serve none of the objectives of the C.P.A. or of punitive damages
generally.
[169]
According to a third position, an award of
punitive damages is justified where there is proof of a certain carelessness by
a merchant or manufacturer with respect to the Act and the conduct it is
supposed to prevent. As we shall see, however, the exact level of carelessness
required to satisfy this test has been defined in various, inconsistent ways by
authors and judges.
[170]
The carelessness test is stated in its most
basic form by Professor Masse:
[translation] For [punitive damages] to
be awarded, therefore, it is sufficient that the merchant display carelessness
with respect to the Act and the conduct it is supposed to prevent.
[p. 1000]
[171]
Quebec courts have adopted Professor Masse’s
opinion in several judgments: Marcotte v. Fédération des caisses Desjardins
du Québec, at para. 724; Gastonguay v.
Entreprises D. L. Paysagiste, 2004 CanLII 31925 (C.Q.), at
paras. 77‑79; and Mathurin v. 3086‑9069
Québec Inc., 2003 CanLII 19131 (Que. Sup. Ct.), at para. 18.
[172]
In Systèmes Techno‑Pompes inc. v.
Tremblay, 2006 QCCA 987, [2006] R.J.Q. 1791, the Quebec Court of Appeal
opted for a test of carelessness that is serious enough to justify an award of
punitive damages:
[translation]
Finally, the most important aspect of exemplary damages is the prevention of
similar conduct. Before awarding such damages, a court must assess the
merchant’s conduct to determine whether it displays carelessness with
respect to the consumer’s rights that is serious enough to justify imposing an
additional sanction in order to prevent the conduct from being repeated.
It
was this last objective of punishment and deterrence that the trial judge
adopted as a basis for awarding exemplary damages. It can hardly be concluded
that the appellant displayed malice and carelessness that were serious
enough to justify an additional sanction. [Emphasis added; paras. 33‑34.]
[173]
Similarly, in Champagne v. Toitures Couture et Associés inc., [2002] R.J.Q. 2863, Poulin J. of the Quebec Superior Court
denied an award of punitive damages on the basis that there was little risk of
the defendant acting carelessly again with respect to the application of the
Act (para. 79).
[174]
According to the Court of Appeal in Systèmes
Techno‑Pompes inc. and the Superior Court in Champagne, a
violation of the C.P.A. that results from mere carelessness by a
merchant will not as a general rule suffice to justify an award of punitive
damages. Although we accept this proposition in principle, it is our opinion
that the decision to award punitive damages should also not be based solely on
the seriousness of the carelessness displayed at the time of the violation.
That would encourage merchants and manufacturers to be imaginative in not
fulfilling their obligations under the C.P.A. rather than to be diligent
in fulfilling them. As we will explain below, our position is that the
seriousness of the carelessness must be considered in the context of the
merchant’s conduct both before and after the violation. At this point, we will
look more specifically at the types of conduct other than carelessness that are
covered by the recourse in punitive damages provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
(c) Criteria for Awarding Punitive Damages
[175]
In establishing the criteria for awarding
punitive damages under s. 272 C.P.A., it must be borne in mind that
the C.P.A. is a statute of public order. No consumer may waive in
advance his or her rights under the Act (s. 262 C.P.A.), nor may
any merchant or manufacturer derogate from the Act, except to offer more
advantageous warranties (s. 261 C.P.A.). The provisions on
prohibited practices are also of public order (L’Heureux and Lacoursière, at
pp. 443 et seq.).
[176]
The fact that the consumer‑merchant
relationship is subject to rules of public order highlights the importance of
those rules and the need for the courts to ensure that they are strictly
applied. Therefore, merchants and manufacturers cannot be lax, passive or
ignorant with respect to consumers’ rights and to their own obligations under
the C.P.A. On the contrary, the approach taken by the legislature
suggests that they must be highly diligent in fulfilling their obligations.
They must therefore make an effort to find out what obligations they have and
take reasonable steps to fulfil them.
[177]
In our opinion, therefore, the purpose of the C.P.A.
is to prevent conduct on the part of merchants and manufacturers in which they
display ignorance, carelessness or serious negligence with respect to
consumers’ rights and to the obligations they have to consumers under the C.P.A.
Obviously, the recourse in punitive damages provided for in s. 272 C.P.A.
also applies, for example, to acts that are intentional, malicious or
vexatious.
[178]
The mere fact that a provision of the C.P.A. has been violated is not
enough to justify an award of punitive damages, however. Thus, where a
merchant realizes that an error has been made and tries diligently to solve the
problems caused to the consumer, this should be taken into account. Neither
the C.P.A. nor art. 1621 C.C.Q. requires a court to be
inflexible or to ignore attempts by a merchant or manufacturer to correct a
problem. A court that has to decide whether to award punitive damages should
thus consider not only the merchant’s conduct prior to the violation, but also
how (if at all) the merchant’s attitude toward the consumer, and toward
consumers in general, changed after the violation. It is only by analysing the
whole of the merchant’s conduct that the court will be able to determine
whether the imperatives of prevention justify an award of punitive damages in
the case before it.
(d) Summary
of Principles
[179]
The principles applicable to the recourse in
punitive damages under the C.P.A. can be summarized as follows:
·
The current rule in Quebec civil law is that
punitive damages may be awarded only if there is a legislative provision
authorizing them;
·
Once an enabling legislative provision has been
identified, the court must first determine whether the plaintiff has the
interest required to claim punitive damages under that provision;
·
The court is bound by any criteria for awarding
punitive damages established in the enabling provision;
·
If the conditions for awarding punitive damages
or the criteria for assessing them are not set out in the enabling statute, the
court must consider the general provisions of art. 1621 C.C.Q. and
the objectives of the enabling statute;
·
For this purpose, the court must identify the
conduct that is to be sanctioned to discourage its repetition, having regard to
the general objectives of punitive damages under art. 1621 C.C.Q.
and the objectives the legislature was pursuing in enacting the statute in
question. The court must determine (1) whether the conduct is
incompatible with the objectives the legislature was pursuing in enacting the
statute and (2) whether it interferes with the achievement of those
objectives.
[180]
In the context of a claim for punitive damages
under s. 272 C.P.A., this analytical approach applies as follows:
·
The punitive damages provided for in s. 272
C.P.A. must be awarded in accordance with art. 1621 C.C.Q.
and must have a preventive objective, that is, to discourage the repetition of
undesirable conduct;
·
Having regard to this objective and the
objectives of the C.P.A., violations by merchants or manufacturers that
are intentional, malicious or vexatious, and conduct on their part in which
they display ignorance, carelessness or serious negligence with respect to
their obligations and consumers’ rights under the C.P.A. may result in
awards of punitive damages. However, before awarding such damages, the court
must consider the whole of the merchant’s conduct at the time of and after the
violation.
F. Is the Appellant Entitled to Punitive Damages in This
Case?
[181]
The trial judge found that the respondents had
intentionally violated the C.P.A. in a calculated manner:
The
very same “conditional” wording which enabled Time to avoid the argument that a
contract was formed or that it undertook unconditionally to pay $833,337
to Mr. Richard, illustrates the contention that this document was specifically
designed to mislead the recipient, that it contains misleading and even
false representations, contrary to the clear wording of [section] 219 of the Consumer
Protection Act . . . . [Italics in original, underlining added;
para. 34.]
[182]
These findings contain no palpable and overriding
errors. Accordingly, this Court would not be justified in changing them.
[183]
These findings are fatal to the respondents’
defence in the circumstances of this case. The violations in issue were
intentional and calculated. Moreover, nothing in the evidence indicates that,
after the appellant complained, the respondents took corrective action to make
their advertising clear or consistent with the letter and spirit of the C.P.A.
On the contrary, the evidence suggests that they rejected his entire claim and
proposed nothing. An award of punitive damages was therefore justified.
[184]
For these reasons, we would allow the
appellant’s recourse in respect of the claim for punitive damages. The
appropriate quantum of damages remains to be determined.
G. What is the Appropriate Quantum of Damages in This Case?
[185]
The trial judge fixed the quantum of the
punitive damages payable by the respondents to the appellant at $100,000.
The respondents challenge the fairness of this amount, arguing that the trial
judge erred in several respects in determining the appropriate quantum of
punitive damages. They submit that, if this Court upholds the trial judge’s
decision to award punitive damages, the quantum should be reduced
significantly.
[186]
More specifically, the respondents criticize the
trial judge for (1) speculating about the number of violations of the C.P.A.
they had committed; (2) taking what she perceived as a violation of the Charter
of the French language into consideration in her assessment of the gravity
of their conduct; and (3) making inferences about their patrimonial
situation without a sufficient factual basis.
[187]
Finally, according to the respondents, the trial
judge’s decision to fix the quantum of punitive damages at $100,000 was
arbitrary. At paragraph 71 of her reasons, the trial judge stated that
she had chosen that amount because it was the amount of the bonus prize the
appellant had a chance to win in addition to the grand prize of US$833,337
if he validated his entry within five days after receiving the Document.
The respondents seem to be arguing that it was irrational to fix the
quantum at $100,000 in these circumstances.
(1)
Role of Trial Courts
[188]
This appeal highlights the problems trial judges
face in calculating punitive damages. Although they have a discretion in this
regard, they must exercise it judicially and must also, to the extent possible,
comply with the practice established by the courts and consider all the
specific circumstances of each case, bearing in mind the principles of
deterrence, punishment and denunciation that underlie punitive damages.
[189]
Since this task requires trial judges to examine
the facts carefully, the Court of Appeal must show considerable deference
before varying the quantum of damages. It must not set aside a trial judge’s
decision in respect of findings and inferences of fact related to the
assessment of damages absent a palpable and overriding error (Housen, at paras. 1‑6, 10 and 25; H.L., at para. 53; Quebec (Public Curator) v. Syndicat national des employés de l’hôpital St‑Ferdinand, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 211, at para. 129; Landry v. Quesnel, [2002] R.J.Q. 80 (C.A.), at para. 31; C. Dallaire, “La gestion d’une réclamation en dommages exemplaires:
éléments essentiels à connaître quant à la nature et l’objectif de cette
réparation, les éléments de procédure et de preuve incontournables ainsi que
l’évaluation du quantum”, in Congrès annuel du Barreau du Québec (2007),
at p. 168).
[190]
It should be borne in mind that a trial court
has latitude in determining the quantum of punitive damages, provided that the
amount it awards remains within rational limits in light of the specific
circumstances of the case before it (St‑Ferdinand, at
para. 125; Whiten, at para. 100). Appellate intervention will
be warranted only where there has been an error of law or a wholly erroneous
assessment of the quantum. An assessment will be wholly erroneous if it is
established that the trial court clearly erred in exercising its discretion,
that is, if the amount awarded was not rationally connected to the purposes
being pursued in awarding punitive damages in the case before the court (St‑Ferdinand,
at para. 129; Provigo Distribution inc. v. Supermarché A.R.G. inc., 1997 CanLII 10209 (Que. C.A.)). In our opinion, errors of this nature
have been made in the case at bar, and they warrant the intervention of this
Court in assessing the quantum of punitive damages.
(2)
Trial Judge’s Assessment of the Quantum of
Punitive Damages
[191]
In her decision to award punitive damages, the
trial judge began by noting that the respondents’ fault was of considerable
gravity, since they had sent false and misleading advertisements to thousands
of French‑speaking consumers in Quebec. The respondents sharply dispute
this finding of fact by the trial judge. In their view, no evidence was
adduced to support this finding, and the appropriate quantum of punitive
damages should instead have been established on the assumption that only one advertisement
was sent to only one consumer (R.F., at para. 109).
[192]
This argument is untenable.
William Miller, Director of Promotion Policy for the respondent Time
Consumer Marketing Inc., himself testified that “[t]he sweepstakes are
used to attract attention to our subscription promotions” (A.R., vol. II,
at p. 4). He also explained in detail that Time Inc. had decided to send
out direct mailings using several lists of names in order to increase
subscriptions (A.R., vol. II, at p. 5). The mailings were
personalized to attract the attention of consumers and invite them to subscribe
to Time magazine (trial judgment, at para. 21; A.R., vol. II,
at pp. 4 and 5). We infer from Mr. Miller’s testimony that the
distribution of such mailings was not only a common practice for the
respondents but was also done on a large scale. In light of this evidence,
although the trial judge did not have evidence that could indicate the precise
number of mailings, her finding cannot be characterized as wholly erroneous.
In our opinion, the gist of her finding was that the respondents had sent many
mailings in Quebec to a large number of consumers. The evidence supporting
this finding was something she could properly consider in analysing the gravity
of the respondents’ conduct in this case. The quantum of punitive damages
cannot therefore be revised on this basis.
[193]
The respondents also challenge the trial judge’s
findings (1) that Time Inc. violated the Charter of the French language,
in particular by sending out advertising material in English only
(paras. 64‑65), and (2) that this violation had to be taken
into consideration in determining the appropriate quantum. On this issue, the
respondents are correct. It was not open to the trial judge to consider the Charter
of the French language in assessing the appropriate quantum of punitive
damages. The C.P.A. and the Charter of the French language are
two separate statutes with distinct legislative objectives. Moreover,
violations of the Charter of the French language are sanctioned pursuant
to its own provisions.
[194]
Finally, the respondents argue that the trial
judge made palpable and overriding errors in her conclusions respecting their
patrimonial situation. First of all, they submit that she erred in finding that
William Miller, Director of Promotion Policy for Time Consumer Marketing Inc.,
had admitted in his testimony that the company “certainly [had] the capacity to pay the amount of US$833,337”
(per Cohen J., at para. 24). A second submission the
respondents make in this regard is that there was no basis in the facts for the
trial judge’s finding that the evidence established that their advertising
campaign was lucrative in terms of the subscriptions they generated. We are in
partial agreement with the respondents on this point. In our opinion, the
trial judge did in fact err in attributing to Mr. Miller an admission he
had not actually made. On the other hand, we do not consider it unreasonable
for her to find that the respondents’ advertising campaign was profitable.
[195]
Where Mr. Miller’s testimony is concerned,
we, like the respondents, were unable to find any admission in it that Time
Inc. was capable of paying the amount of US$833,337 claimed by the appellant.
Quite the contrary, it is clear from his testimony that at no time did Mr.
Miller attempt to quantify the company’s assets or assess its ability to pay.
Indeed, he said he was unable to do so because he was not part of the company’s
financial team (testimony of William Miller, at p. 32, lines 2‑4).
We believe it would be helpful to reproduce the relevant passage from
Mr. Miller’s testimony on this point:
THE COURT:
[William Miller] admitted [that Time Inc.] did [use the advertising scheme at issue over the
years]. Why don’t you ask him if Time is able to pay that amount if I would
award the amount in the claim, the part of the claim which relates to moral and
punitive damages?
[HUBERT SIBRE]:
Q. 338 Would Time be able to pay this
amount? Would it have the solvency to pay this amount if ever condemned?
[A.] You
know, I’m not part of the financial structure of the company so I really can’t
comment on that. [Emphasis
added; A.R., vol. II, at pp. 31‑32.]
[196]
This passage speaks for itself. The trial
judge’s finding that Mr. Miller had made an admission regarding Time Inc.’s
ability to pay had no basis in the facts and constituted a palpable error. The
trial judge was not therefore in a position to make, as she did, findings with
respect to the respondents’ patrimonial situation on the basis of this
testimony.
[197]
However, our conclusion is quite different as to
the trial judge’s finding that the respondents’ advertising campaign that led
to this litigation was profitable. The respondents argue that it was not open
to the trial judge to make this finding, (1) because all that had been
proven was that a single consumer had purchased a single subscription, and
(2) because the fact that Time Inc. had paid out more than US$1 million to
winners of its sweepstakes in the year 2000 provided no information on its
patrimonial situation in 2007 (the year of the trial judge’s decision in this
case). In our view, these arguments are unconvincing. In Mr. Miller’s
own words, the respondents had been organizing promotional sweepstakes in
Canada and the United States since the mid‑1980s. He added that several
hundred people had won amounts ranging from US$1,000 to $1,600,000 in
these sweepstakes, the admitted purpose of which was to attract consumers’
attention to the respondents’ subscription promotions (testimony of William
Miller, A.R., vol. II, at p. 4). We find it logical and reasonable,
in light of the amounts paid out by Time Inc. and the number of years that the
promotional sweepstakes have existed, to infer from the evidence, as the trial
judge did, that these sweepstakes were lucrative in that they enabled Time Inc.
to add significantly to its readership.
[198]
When all is said and done, should this Court
vary the amount of $100,000 awarded by the trial judge as punitive damages? In
our opinion, it should. Although the trial judge did not err in finding that
the respondents had sent many mailings in Quebec to a large number of consumers
and that these promotional sweepstakes had enabled them to sell many new
subscriptions, we consider that the errors she made had a by no means
insignificant impact on her assessment. In light of those errors and the fact
that the trial judge’s decision seems to have been influenced by the fact that
the respondents had promised a $100,000 bonus in addition to the grand prize,
we believe that it will be necessary to re‑assess the quantum of the
punitive damages she awarded.
(a) Criteria for Assessing the Quantum
[199]
An assessment of the quantum of punitive damages
must start with art. 1621 C.C.Q., which sets out some guiding
principles that are intended to bring greater consistency and objectivity to
the assessment of such damages (J.‑L. Baudouin and P.‑G. Jobin,
Les obligations (6th ed. 2005), by P.-G. Jobin with the
collaboration of N. Vézina, at para. 912). Article 1621 C.C.Q.
begins by stating that the amount awarded as punitive damages must never exceed
what is necessary to fulfil their preventive purpose. The second paragraph of
art. 1621 adds that the amount must be determined in light of all the
appropriate circumstances, in particular (1) the gravity of the debtor’s
fault, (2) the debtor’s patrimonial situation, (3) the extent of the
reparation for which the debtor is already liable to the creditor and
(4), where such is the case, the fact that the payment of the damages is
wholly or partly assumed by a third person.
[200]
The gravity of the fault is undoubtedly the most
important factor (Genex Communications inc. v.
Association québécoise de l’industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo, 2009 QCCA 2201, [2009] R.J.Q. 2743; Fondation québécoise du cancer v. Patenaude, 2006 QCCA 1554,
[2007] R.R.A. 5; Voltec ltée v. CJMF FM ltée, [2002]
R.R.A. 1078 (C.A.); Baudouin, Jobin and Vézina, at para. 912). It is assessed from two perspectives: the wrongful conduct of the
wrongdoer and the seriousness of the infringement of the victim’s rights.
According to Claude Dallaire, the courts consider the gravity of the
conduct and its impact on the victim (pp. 127 et seq.). The
analysis of the evidence will therefore be focused sometimes on the offender’s
conduct and sometimes on the effect of that conduct on the victim (Procureur
général du Québec v. Boisclair, [2001] R.J.Q. 2449
(C.A.), at paras. 9‑10). In either case, it
must be borne in mind that a myriad of contextual factors can be taken into
account in the analysis. If, for example, the evidence shows that the contract
was abusive, that the merchant committed a fault and gained an undue
competitive advantage by doing so, or that the consumers who were victims of
the practice were particularly vulnerable, these facts will obviously be
relevant to the assessment of the gravity of the fault.
[201]
The second factor mentioned in art. 1621,
para. 2 C.C.Q. is the debtor’s patrimonial situation, and its purpose is
to ensure that the amount of the award is tailored to the offender’s situation
in order to achieve the intended effect of the statute in question. Thus, the
larger the debtor’s patrimony, the higher the award of punitive damages must be
to ensure that the general objectives of such damages are achieved and to
discourage any repetition. The reverse is also true where a debtor is of
modest means. Obviously, even where an offender is extremely wealthy, the
amount of the award must still be rationally connected with the purposes for
which punitive damages are awarded in a particular case.
[202]
The third factor mentioned in art. 1621,
para. 2 C.C.Q., the extent of the reparation already awarded under other
heads, is an analytical criterion that has been used frequently (St‑Ferdinand;
Augustus v. Gosset, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 268; Lambert v. Macara,
[2004] R.J.Q. 2637 (C.A.)). According to it, the court must not award punitive
damages unless compensatory damages are not enough to discourage repetition
either because their amount is too small or because they will have no impact on
the debtor’s financial situation. However, this principle does not change the
independent nature of punitive damages. Even if an award of compensatory
damages is generous, it will not necessarily preclude an award of punitive
damages.
[203]
Finally, the purpose of the fourth factor
mentioned in art. 1621, para. 2 C.C.Q. is to adjust the quantum of
punitive damages on the basis of the total amount the debtor will have to pay
personally. This assessment ensures that the amount of the award will actually
have the intended effect on the offender. The amount may sometimes have to be
varied where a third person is paying, since the objective of preventing
repetition is then achieved through an intermediary. The person actually
paying must thus be punished to motivate that person to encourage the wrongdoer
to change his or her ways. Closely related to this consideration, another
purpose of this factor is to evaluate the real utility of the second of the
factors mentioned in art. 1621, para. 2 C.C.Q., namely the debtor’s
patrimonial situation. Thus, where the debtor of the obligation will not
personally be paying the amount of the award of punitive damages, there is no
need to assess his or her patrimony to determine that amount.
(b) Other Criteria to be Considered
[204]
Although art. 1621, para. 2 C.C.Q.
lists various factors that are relevant in determining the appropriate quantum
of punitive damages, the fact that this list is preceded by the words “all the
appropriate circumstances” and “in particular” clearly indicates that the
legislature intended that it be possible to consider other, unnamed factors as
well. In our view, it will be helpful to mention a few of the factors we
believe can be of assistance to trial courts in this regard. Some of them have
already been referred to by the Quebec courts, while others, although taken
from the common law, can also be applied within the framework of Quebec law in
this area.
[205]
First, where rights and freedoms guaranteed by
the Quebec Charter have been interfered with, the courts have held that
the identity and characteristics of a legal person established for a private
interest can also be considered. The courts’ approach to the quantification of
damages may therefore vary depending on whether the wrongdoer is a natural
person, a legal person or a legal person established in the public interest. [translation] “It is easy to understand why the courts react unfavourably to
antisocial conduct on the part of a legal person established for a private
interest or a legal person established in the public interest that is greedy to
make profits or to gain political or strategic advantages” (Dallaire, at
pp. 131‑33).
[206]
Also, in our opinion, it is perfectly acceptable
to use punitive damages, as is done at common law, to relieve a wrongdoer of
its profit where compensatory damages would amount to nothing more than an
expense paid to earn greater profits while flouting the law (Whiten, at para. 72).
[207]
Third, the civil, disciplinary or criminal
history of the person guilty of a violation may be a relevant factor. The
amount awarded against a wrongdoer who has committed a first offence and whose
previous conduct has been exemplary may therefore differ from the amount
awarded against one who has been involved in many serious prior offences (Whiten,
at para. 69; Dallaire, at
pp. 136‑42 and 164‑65).
[208]
Finally, in addition to the fact that
compensatory damages have been awarded, the trial court can, in determining the
appropriate quantum of punitive damages in the civil proceedings before it,
take account of any disciplinary, criminal or administrative penalties that
have already been imposed as punishment for the offender’s conduct (Whiten,
at para. 123). In appropriate circumstances, therefore, the quantum of
punitive damages may be limited because such other penalties have already
contributed to achieving the legislature’s objective of prevention.
[209]
We note that the above factors must not be
considered automatically by the trial court in every case. Their relevance
will depend on the circumstances of the specific case. As well, these factors
do not represent an exhaustive list of the considerations that are relevant to
determining the quantum of punitive damages. Every relevant factor can be
considered, provided that the purpose of the analysis remains the same: to
ensure that the amount awarded as punitive damages is rationally proportionate
to the objectives for which those damages are awarded in the case in question,
having due regard to the specific circumstances of the case (Whiten, at
paras. 74 and 111).
(3) Application to the Facts
[210]
Where a court decides to award punitive damages,
it must relate the facts of the case before it to the objectives that underlie
such damages and ask itself how, in that particular case, awarding them would
further those objectives. It must try to fix the most appropriate amount, that
is, the lowest amount that would serve the purpose (Whiten, at para. 71). Even if we disregard the alleged violation of
the Charter of the French language as an aggravating factor, the fact remains that the respondents’
conduct was serious and deliberate and that it was capable of affecting a large
number of consumers. Moreover, even after the consumer complained about their
misleading practices, there is no evidence that the respondents did anything to
correct them. This must also be considered an aggravating factor.
[211]
On the other hand, the impact of the
respondents’ fault on the appellant remains quite limited, though, granted, not
negligible. The appellant subscribed to Time magazine, began receiving
it the following month and also received, as promised, a camera and photo album
as a bonus. Moreover, he never asked to be reimbursed for the cost of the
subscription to Time magazine on the basis of the misleading advertising
material. As we have seen, he instituted a proceeding in which he alleged
that the respondents were contractually bound to pay him $1,250,887.10, a
claim which proved to be unfounded. Thus, the appellant’s attitude has
contributed to the proportions this case has ultimately assumed.
[212]
In a context in which a large number of consumers may have been victims of the
prohibited practices engaged in by the respondents, we believe that the limited
impact of the respondents’ fault on the appellant and the appellant’s attitude
in this case are relevant factors in determining the amount that should be
awarded as punitive damages.
[213]
Where the respondents’ patrimonial situation is
concerned, the information obtained at trial was insufficient to make any
useful findings. The appellant tries to get around this lack of evidence by
arguing that it was open to the trial judge to take judicial notice of the fact
that the respondents were wealthy. His position is based on the facts that
they belong to the TimeWarner conglomerate and that the wealth of that
conglomerate is common knowledge. In our view, the appellant’s position is
incorrect. The respondents and TimeWarner are distinct entities, and
TimeWarner is not a defendant in this case. The criterion of the patrimonial
situation set out in the second paragraph of art. 1621 C.C.Q.
concerns the patrimony of one or more debtors, not of third persons.
The patrimony of a third person can in principle be taken into account only if
it is shown that this person will be wholly or partly assuming the payment of
the damages (art. 1621, para. 2 C.C.Q.). The appellant has not
proven this to be the case. It follows that the fact that the respondents
belong to the TimeWarner conglomerate is of no assistance to the appellant in
this case. Nevertheless, we would like to make it clear that the lack of
evidence regarding the respondents’ patrimonial situation in no way means that
they are immune from a possible award of damages. On the contrary, it means
that this Court may properly render its decision without having to assess their
actual financial capacity. The Court cannot assume that the respondents’
financial capacity would not permit them to pay an award set at an otherwise
reasonable amount. Moreover, it must not be forgotten that the evidence showed
that the prohibited practices engaged in by the respondents had been very
profitable for them from a financial standpoint. In the circumstances of this
case, this is a relevant factor to be considered in determining the quantum of
punitive damages.
[214]
Finally, the fact that the amount of the award
of compensatory damages is small favours awarding a significant amount of
punitive damages. At trial, the respondents were ordered to pay $1,000 in
compensatory damages, and we propose to uphold that award. However, that
amount is clearly inadequate to meet the preventive purpose of art. 1621 C.C.Q.
[215]
Having regard to all the factors discussed
above, we would reduce the punitive damages awarded to the appellant
to $15,000. This amount suffices in the circumstances to fulfil the
preventive purpose of punitive damages, underlines the gravity of the violations
of the Act and sanctions the respondents’ conduct in a manner that is serious
enough to induce them to cease the prohibited practices in which they have been
engaging, if they have not already done so.
[216]
The appellant has requested costs on the amount of
his original action. In our view, this request is not justified. Costs in the
Superior Court and the Court of Appeal will be taxed in accordance with the
tariffs applicable in those courts. However, the appellant will have his costs
in this Court on a solicitor and client basis because of the importance of the
issues of law he raised before us (Finney v. Barreau du Québec, 2004 SCC
36, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 17).
V.
Conclusion
[217]
For the reasons set out above, the appellant’s
appeal is allowed in part. The judgment of the Court of Appeal, in which
it set aside the judgment of the Superior Court and dismissed the appellant’s
action in damages against the respondents, is set aside. The Superior Court’s
judgment is restored in part, as the respondents are ordered to pay the
appellant $1,000 in compensatory damages and $15,000 in punitive
damages, with interest from the date of service. The appellant is entitled to
costs in the Superior Court and the Court of Appeal in accordance with the
tariffs applicable in those courts, and on a solicitor and client basis in this
Court.
APPENDIX
Appeal
allowed in part with costs.
Solicitors
for the appellant: Davis, Montréal.
Solicitors for the
respondents: Miller Thomson Pouliot, Montréal.