SUPREME COURT OF CANADA
Citation: Tercon Contractors Ltd. v. British Columbia (Transportation and Highways), 2010 SCC 4, [2010] 1 S.C.R. 69 |
Date: 20100212 Docket: 32460 |
Between:
Tercon Contractors Ltd.
Appellant
and
Her Majesty The Queen in Right of the Province of British
Columbia, by her Ministry of Transportation and Highways
Respondent
‑ and ‑
Attorney General of Ontario
Intervener
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
Reasons for Judgment: (paras. 1 to 80) Dissenting Reasons: (paras. 81 to 142) |
Cromwell J. (LeBel, Deschamps, Fish and Charron JJ. concurring) Binnie J. (McLachlin C.J. and Abella and Rothstein JJ. concurring) |
______________________________
Tercon Contractors Ltd. v. British Columbia (Transportation and Highways), 2010 SCC 4, [2010] 1 S.C.R. 69
Tercon Contractors Ltd. Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen in Right of the Province of British
Columbia, by her Ministry of Transportation and Highways Respondent
and
Attorney General of Ontario Intervener
Indexed as: Tercon Contractors Ltd. v. British Columbia (Transportation and Highways)
2010 SCC 4
File No.: 32460.
2009: March 23; 2010: February 12.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Contracts — Breach of terms — Tender — Ineligible bidder — Exclusion of liability clause — Doctrine of fundamental breach — Province issuing tender call for construction of highway — Request for proposals restricting qualified bidders to six proponents — Province accepting bid from ineligible bidder — Exclusion clause protecting Province from liability arising from participation in tendering process — Whether Province breached terms of tendering contract in entertaining bid from ineligible bidder — If so, whether Province’s conduct fell within terms of exclusion clause — If so, whether court should nevertheless refuse to enforce the exclusion clause because of unconscionability or some other contravention of public policy.
The Province of British Columbia issued a request for expressions of interest (“RFEI”) for the design and construction of a highway. Six teams responded with submissions including Tercon and Brentwood. A few months later, the Province informed the six proponents that it now intended to design the highway itself and issued a request for proposals (“RFP”) for its construction. The RFP set out a specifically defined project and contemplated that proposals would be evaluated according to specific criteria. Under its terms, only the six original proponents were eligible to submit a proposal; those received from any other party would not be considered. The RFP also included an exclusion of liability clause which provided: “Except as expressly and specifically permitted in these Instructions to Proponents, no Proponent shall have any claim for compensation of any kind whatsoever, as a result of participating in this RFP, and by submitting a Proposal each Proponent shall be deemed to have agreed that it has no claim.” As it lacked expertise in drilling and blasting, Brentwood entered into a pre‑bidding agreement with another construction company (“EAC”), which was not a qualified bidder, to undertake the work as a joint venture. This arrangement allowed Brentwood to prepare a more competitive proposal. Ultimately, Brentwood submitted a bid in its own name with EAC listed as a “major member” of the team. Brentwood and Tercon were the two short‑listed proponents and the Province selected Brentwood for the project. Tercon successfully brought an action in damages against the Province. The trial judge found that the Brentwood bid was, in fact, submitted by a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC and that the Province, which was aware of the situation, breached the express provisions of the tendering contract with Tercon by considering a bid from an ineligible bidder and by awarding it the work. She also held that, as a matter of construction, the exclusion clause did not bar recovery for the breaches she had found. The clause was ambiguous and she resolved this ambiguity in Tercon’s favour. She held that the Province’s breach was fundamental and that it was not fair or reasonable to enforce the exclusion clause in light of the Province’s breach. The Court of Appeal set aside the decision, holding that the exclusion clause was clear and unambiguous and barred compensation for all defaults.
Held (McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, Abella and Rothstein JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be allowed. The Court agreed on the appropriate framework of analysis but divided on the applicability of the exclusion clause to the facts.
The Court: With respect to the appropriate framework of analysis the doctrine of fundamental breach should be “laid to rest”. The following analysis should be applied when a plaintiff seeks to escape the effect of an exclusion clause or other contractual terms to which it had previously agreed. The first issue is whether, as a matter of interpretation, the exclusion clause even applies to the circumstances established in evidence. This will depend on the court’s interpretation of the intention of the parties as expressed in the contract. If the exclusion clause applies, the second issue is whether the exclusion clause was unconscionable and thus invalid at the time the contract was made. If the exclusion clause is held to be valid at the time of contract formation and applicable to the facts of the case, a third enquiry may be raised as to whether the court should nevertheless refuse to enforce the exclusion clause because of an overriding public policy. The burden of persuasion lies on the party seeking to avoid enforcement of the clause to demonstrate an abuse of the freedom of contract that outweighs the very strong public interest in their enforcement. Conduct approaching serious criminality or egregious fraud are but examples of well‑accepted considerations of public policy that are substantially incontestable and may override the public policy of freedom to contract and disable the defendant from relying upon the exclusion clause. Despite agreement on the appropriate framework of analysis, the court divided on the applicability of the exclusion clause to the facts of this case as set out below.
Per LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Charron and Cromwell JJ.: The Province breached the express provisions of the tendering contract with Tercon by accepting a bid from a party who should not even have been permitted to participate in the tender process and by ultimately awarding the work to that ineligible bidder. This egregious conduct by the Province also breached the implied duty of fairness to bidders. The exclusion clause, which barred claims for compensation “as a result of participating” in the tendering process, did not, when properly interpreted, exclude Tercon’s claim for damages. By considering a bid from an ineligible bidder, the Province not only acted in a way that breached the express and implied terms of the contract, it did so in a manner that was an affront to the integrity and business efficacy of the tendering process.
Submitting a compliant bid in response to a tender call may give rise to “Contract A” between the bidder and the owner. Whether a Contract A arises and what its terms are depends on the express and implied terms and conditions of the tender call and the legal consequences of the parties’ actual dealings in each case. Here, there is no basis to interfere with the trial judge’s findings that there was an intent to create contractual obligations upon submission of a compliant bid and that only the six original proponents that qualified through the RFEI process were eligible to submit a response to the RFP. The tender documents and the required ministerial approval of the process stated expressly that the Province was contractually bound to accept bids only from eligible bidders. Contract A therefore could not arise by the submission of a bid from any other party. The trial judge found that the joint venture of Brentwood and EAC was not eligible to bid as they had not simply changed the composition of their team but, in effect, had created a new bidder. The Province fully understood this and would not consider a bid from or award the work to that joint venture. The trial judge did not err in finding that in fact, if not in form, Brentwood’s bid was on behalf of a joint venture between itself and EAC. The joint venture provided Brentwood with a competitive advantage in the bidding process and was a material consideration in favour of the Brentwood bid during the Province’s evaluation process. Moreover, the Province took active steps to obfuscate the reality of the true nature of the Brentwood bid. The bid by the joint venture constituted “material non‑compliance” with the tendering contract and breached both the express eligibility provisions of the tender documents, and the implied duty to act fairly towards all bidders.
When the exclusion clause is interpreted in harmony with the rest of the RFP and in light of the commercial context of the tendering process, it did not exclude a damages claim resulting from the Province unfairly permitting an ineligible bidder to participate in the tendering process. The closed list of bidders was the foundation of this RFP and the parties should, at the very least, be confident that their initial bids will not be skewed by some underlying advantage in the drafting of the call for tenders conferred only upon one potential bidder. The requirement that only compliant bids be considered and the implied obligation to treat bidders fairly are factors that contribute to the integrity and business efficacy of the tendering process. The parties did not intend, through the words found in this exclusion clause, to waive compensation for conduct, like that of the Province in this case, that strikes at the heart of the tendering process. Clear language would be necessary to exclude liability for breach of the implied obligation, particularly in the case of public procurement where transparency is essential. Furthermore, the restriction on eligibility of bidders was a key element of the alternative process approved by the Minister. When the statutory provisions which governed the tendering process in this case are considered, it seems unlikely that the parties intended through this exclusion clause to effectively gut a key aspect of the approved process. The text of the exclusion clause in the RFP addresses claims that result from “participating in this RFP”. Central to “participating in this RFP” was participating in a contest among those eligible to participate. A process involving other bidders — the process followed by the Province — is not the process called for by “this RFP” and being part of that other process is not in any meaningful sense “participating in this RFP”.
Per McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, Abella and Rothstein JJ. (dissenting): The Ministry’s conduct, while in breach of its contractual obligations, fell within the terms of the exclusion compensation clause. The clause is clear and unambiguous and no legal ground or rule of law permits a court to override the freedom of the parties to contract with respect to this particular term, or to relieve Tercon against its operation in this case. A court has no discretion to refuse to enforce a valid and applicable contractual term unless the plaintiff can point to some paramount consideration of public policy sufficient to override the public interest in freedom of contact and defeat what would otherwise be the contractual rights of the parties. The public interest in the transparency and integrity of the government tendering process, while important, did not render unenforceable the terms of the contract Tercon agreed to.
Brentwood was a legitimate competitor in the RFP process and all bidders knew that the road contract would not be performed by the proponent alone and required a large “team” of different trades and personnel to perform. The issue was whether EAC would be on the job as a major sub‑contractor or identified with Brentwood as a joint venture “proponent” with EAC. Tercon has legitimate reason to complain about the Ministry’s conduct, but its misconduct did not rise to the level where public policy would justify the court in depriving the Ministry of the protection of the exclusion of compensation clause freely agreed to by Tercon in the contract.
Contract A is based not on some abstract externally imposed rule of law but on the presumed (and occasionally implied) intent of the parties. At issue is the intention of the actual parties not what the court may project in hindsight would have been the intention of reasonable parties. Only in rare circumstances will a court relieve a party from the bargain it has made.
The exclusion clause did not run afoul of the statutory requirements. While the Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act favours “the integrity of the tendering process”, it nowhere prohibits the parties from negotiating a “no claims” clause as part of their commercial agreement and cannot plausibly be interpreted to have that effect. Tercon — a sophisticated and experienced contractor — chose to bid on the project, including the risk posed by an exclusion of compensation clause, on the terms proposed by the Ministry. That was its prerogative and nothing in the “policy of the Act” barred the parties’ agreement on that point.
The trial judge found that Contract A was breached when the RFP process was not conducted by the Ministry with the degree of fairness and transparency that the terms of Contract A entitled Tercon to expect. The Ministry was at fault in its performance of the RFP, but the process did not thereby cease to be the RFP process in which Tercon had elected to participate.
The interpretation of the majority on this point is disagreed with. “[P]articipating in this RFP” began with “submitting a Proposal” for consideration. The RFP process consisted of more than the final selection of the winning bid and Tercon participated in it. Tercon’s bid was considered. To deny that such participation occurred on the ground that in the end the Ministry chose a Brentwood joint venture (an ineligible bidder) instead of Brentwood itself (an eligible bidder) would be to give the clause a strained and artificial interpretation in order, indirectly and obliquely, to avoid the impact of what may seem to the majority ex post facto to have been an unfair and unreasonable clause.
Moreover, the exclusion clause was not unconscionable. While the Ministry and Tercon do not exercise the same level of power and authority, Tercon is a major contractor and is well able to look after itself in a commercial context so there is no relevant imbalance of bargaining power. Further, the clause is not as draconian as Tercon portrays it. Other remedies for breach of Contract A were available. The parties expected, even if they did not like it, that the “no claims” clause would operate even where the eligibility criteria in respect of the bid (including the bidder) were not complied with.
Finally, the Ministry’s misconduct did not rise to the level where public policy would justify the court in depriving the Ministry of the protection of the exclusion of compensation clause freely agreed to by Tercon in the contract.
Cases Cited
By Cromwell J.
Applied: M.J.B. Enterprises Ltd. v. Defence Construction (1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619; Martel Building Ltd. v. Canada, 2000 SCC 60, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 860; considered: Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 426; Cahill (G.J.) & Co. (1979) Ltd. v. Newfoundland and Labrador (Minister of Municipal and Provincial Affairs), 2005 NLTD 129, 250 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 145; Guarantee Co. of North America v. Gordon Capital Corp., [1999] 3 S.C.R. 423; Fraser Jewellers (1982) Ltd. v. Dominion Electric Protection Co. (1997), 34 O.R. (3d) 1; referred to: Canadian Pacific Hotels Ltd. v. Bank of Montreal, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 711; Double N Earthmovers Ltd. v. Edmonton (City), 2007 SCC 3, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 116; Hillis Oil and Sales Ltd. v. Wynn’s Canada, Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 57.
By Binnie J. (dissenting)
Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 426; The Queen in right of Ontario v. Ron Engineering & Construction (Eastern) Ltd., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 111; M.J.B. Enterprises Ltd. v. Defence Construction (1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619; Naylor Group Inc. v. Ellis‑Don Construction Ltd., 2001 SCC 58, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 943; Martel Building Ltd. v. Canada, 2000 SCC 60, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 860; Double N Earthmovers Ltd. v. Edmonton (City), 2007 SCC 3, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 116; Tercon Contractors Ltd. v. British Columbia (1993), 9 C.L.R. (2d) 197, aff’d [1994] B.C.J. No. 2658 (QL); Karsales (Harrow) Ltd. v. Wallis, [1956] 1 W.L.R. 936; Guarantee Co. of North America v. Gordon Capital Corp., [1999] 3 S.C.R. 423; ABB Inc. v. Domtar Inc., 2007 SCC 50, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 461; Re Millar Estate, [1938] S.C.R. 1; Plas‑Tex Canada Ltd. v. Dow Chemical of Canada Ltd., 2004 ABCA 309, 245 D.L.R. (4th) 650.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 311, ss. 4, 23.
Authors Cited
Hall, Geoff R. Canadian Contractual Interpretation Law. Markham, Ont.: LexisNexis, 2007.
Kain, Brandon, and Douglas T. Yoshida. “The Doctrine of Public Policy in Canadian Contract Law”, in Todd L. Archibald and Randall Scott Echlin, eds., Annual Review of Civil Litigation, 2007. Toronto: Thomson Carswell, 2007, 1.
McCamus, John D. The Law of Contracts. Toronto: Irwin Law, 2005.
Waddams, S. M. The Law of Contracts, 5th ed. Aurora, Ont.: Canada Law Book, 2005.
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court of Appeal (Donald, Mackenzie and Lowry JJ.A.), 2007 BCCA 592, 73 B.C.L.R. (4th) 201, 40 B.L.R. (4th) 26, 289 D.L.R. (4th) 647, [2008] 2 W.W.R. 410, 249 B.C.A.C. 103, 414 W.A.C. 103, 66 C.L.R. (3d) 1, [2007] B.C.J. No. 2558 (QL), 2007 CarswellBC 2880, setting aside a decision of Dillon J., 2006 BCSC 499, 53 B.C.L.R. (4th) 138, [2006] 6 W.W.R. 275, 18 B.L.R. (4th) 88, 51 C.L.R. (3d) 227, [2006] B.C.J. No. 657 (QL), 2006 CarswellBC 730. Appeal allowed, McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, Abella and Rothstein JJ. dissenting.
Chris R. Armstrong, Brian G. McLean, William S. McLean and Marie‑France Major, for the appellant.
J. Edward Gouge, Q.C., Jonathan Eades and Kate Hamm, for the respondent.
Malliha Wilson and Lucy McSweeney, for the intervener.
The judgment of LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Charron and Cromwell JJ. was delivered by
Cromwell J. —
I. Introduction
[1] The Province accepted a bid from a bidder who was not eligible to participate in the tender and then took steps to ensure that this fact was not disclosed. The main question on appeal, as I see it, is whether the Province succeeded in excluding its liability for damages flowing from this conduct through an exclusion clause it inserted into the contract. I share the view of the trial judge that it did not.
[2] The appeal arises out of a tendering contract between the appellant, Tercon Contractors Ltd., who was the bidder, and the respondent, Her Majesty the Queen in Right of the Province of British Columbia, who issued the tender call. The case turns on the interpretation of provisions in the contract relating to eligibility to bid and exclusion of compensation resulting from participation in the tendering process.
[3] The trial judge found that the respondent (which I will refer to as the Province) breached the express provisions of the tendering contract with Tercon by accepting a bid from another party who was not eligible to bid and by ultimately awarding the work to that ineligible bidder. In short, a bid was accepted and the work awarded to a party who should not even have been permitted to participate in the tender process. The judge also found that this and related conduct by the Province breached the implied duty of fairness to bidders, holding that the Province had acted “egregiously” (2006 BCSC 499, 53 B.C.L.R. (4th) 138, at para. 150). The judge then turned to the Province’s defence based on an exclusion clause that barred claims for compensation “as a result of participating” in the tendering process. She held that this clause, properly interpreted, did not exclude Tercon’s claim for damages. In effect, she held that it was not within the contemplation of the parties that this clause would bar a remedy in damages arising from the Province’s unfair dealings with a party who was not entitled to participate in the tender in the first place.
[4] The Province appealed and the Court of Appeal reversed (2007 BCCA 592, 73 B.C.L.R. (4th) 201). Dealing only with the exclusion clause issue, it held that the clause was clear and unambiguous and barred compensation for all defaults.
[5] On Tercon’s appeal to this Court, the questions for us are whether the successful bidder was eligible to participate in the request for proposals (“RFP”) and, if not, whether Tercon’s claim for damages is barred by the exclusion clause.
[6] In my respectful view, the trial judge reached the right result on both issues. The Province’s attempts to persuade us that it did not breach the tendering contract are, in my view, wholly unsuccessful. The foundation of the tendering contract was that only six, pre-selected bidders would be permitted to participate in the bidding. As the trial judge held, the Province not only acted in a way that breached the express and implied terms of the contract by considering a bid from an ineligible bidder, it did so in a manner that was an affront to the integrity and business efficacy of the tendering process. One must not lose sight of the fact that the trial judge found that the Province acted egregiously by “ensuring that [the true bidder] was not disclosed” (para. 150) and that its breach “attacke[d] the underlying premise of the [tendering] process” (para. 146), a process which was set out in detail in the contract and, in addition, had been given ministerial approval as required by statute.
[7] As for its reliance on the exclusion clause, the Province submits that the parties were free to agree to limitations of liability and did so. Consideration of this submission requires an interpretation of the words of the clause to which the parties agreed in the context of the contract as a whole. My view is that, properly interpreted, the exclusion clause does not protect the Province from Tercon’s damage claim which arises from the Province’s dealings with a party not even eligible to bid, let alone from its breach of the implied duty of fairness to bidders. In other words, the Province’s liability did not arise from Tercon’s participation in the process that the Province established, but from the Province’s unfair dealings with a party who was not entitled to participate in that process.
[8] I would allow the appeal and restore the judgment of the trial judge.
II. Brief Overview of the Facts
[9] I will have to set out more factual detail as part of my analysis. For now, a very brief summary will suffice. In 2000, the Ministry of Transportation and Highways (also referred to as the “Province”) issued a request for expressions of interest (“RFEI”) for designing and building a highway in northwestern British Columbia. Six teams made submissions, including Tercon and Brentwood Enterprises Ltd. Later that year, the Province informed the six proponents that it now intended to design the highway itself and would issue a RFP for its construction.
[10] The RFP was formally issued on January 15, 2001. Under its terms, only the six original proponents were eligible to submit a proposal. The RFP also included a clause excluding all claims for damages “as a result of participating in this RFP” (s. 2.10).
[11] Unable to submit a competitive bid on its own, Brentwood teamed up with Emil Anderson Construction Co. (“EAC”), which was not a qualified bidder, and together they submitted a bid in Brentwood’s name. Brentwood and Tercon were the two short-listed proponents and the Ministry ultimately selected Brentwood as the preferred proponent.
[12] Tercon brought an action seeking damages, alleging that the Ministry had considered and accepted an ineligible bid and that, but for that breach, it would have been awarded the contract. The trial judge agreed and awarded roughly $3.5 million in damages and prejudgment interest. As noted, the Court of Appeal reversed and Tercon appeals by leave of the Court.
III. Issues
[13] The issues for decision are whether the trial judge erred in finding that:
1. the Province breached the tendering contract by entertaining a bid from an ineligible bidder.
2. the exclusion clause does not bar the appellant’s claim for damages for the breaches of the tendering contract found by the trial judge.
IV. Analysis
A. Was the Brentwood Bid Ineligible?
[14] The first issue is whether the Brentwood bid was from an eligible bidder. The judge found that the bid was in substance, although not in form, from a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC and that it was, therefore, an ineligible bid. The Province attacks this finding on three grounds:
(i) a joint venture is not a legal person and therefore the Province could not and did not contract with a joint venture;
(ii) it did not award the contract to EAC and EAC had no contractual responsibility to the Province for failure to perform the contract;
(iii) there was no term of the RFP that restricted the right of proponents to enter into joint venture agreements with others; this arrangement merely left Brentwood, the original proponent, in place and allowed it to enhance its ability to perform the work.
[15] While these were the Province’s main points, its position became more wide-ranging during oral argument, at times suggesting that it had no contractual obligation to deal only with eligible bidders. It is therefore necessary to take a step back and look at that threshold point before turning to the Province’s more focussed submissions.
1. The Province’s Contractual Obligations in the Bidding Process
[16] The judge found, and it was uncontested at trial, that only the six original proponents that qualified through the RFEI process were eligible to submit a response to the RFP. This finding is not challenged on appeal, although there was a passing suggestion during oral argument that there was no contractual obligation of this sort at all. The trial judge also held, noting that this point was uncontested, that a joint venture between Brentwood and EAC was ineligible to bid. This is also not contested on appeal. These two findings are critical to the case and provide important background for an issue that is in dispute, namely whether the Brentwood bid was ineligible. It is, therefore, worth reviewing the relevant background in detail. I first briefly set out the legal framework and then turn to the trial judge’s findings.
2. Legal Principles
[17] Submitting a compliant bid in response to a tender call may give rise to a contract — called Contract A — between the bidder and the owner, the express terms of which are found in the tender documents. The contract may also have implied terms according to the principles set out in Canadian Pacific Hotels Ltd. v. Bank of Montreal, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 711; see also M.J.B. Enterprises Ltd. v. Defence Construction (1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619, and Martel Building Ltd. v. Canada, 2000 SCC 60, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 860. The key word, however, is “may”. The Contract A/Contract B framework is one that arises, if at all, from the dealings between the parties. It is not an artificial construct imposed by the courts, but a description of the legal consequences of the parties’ actual dealings. The Court emphasized in M.J.B. that whether Contract A arises and if it does, what its terms are, depend on the express and implied terms and conditions of the tender call in each case. As Iacobucci J. put it, at para. 19:
What is important . . . is that the submission of a tender in response to an invitation to tender may give rise to contractual obligations, quite apart from the obligations associated with the construction contract to be entered into upon the acceptance of a tender, depending upon whether the parties intend to initiate contractual relations by the submission of a bid. If such a contract arises, its terms are governed by the terms and conditions of the tender call. [Emphasis added.]
3. The Trial Judge’s Findings Concerning the Existence of Contract A
[18] The question of whether Tercon’s submission of a compliant bid gave rise to contractual relations between it and the Province was contested by the Province at trial. The trial judge gave extensive reasons for finding against the Province on this issue. We are told that the Province did not pursue this point in the Court of Appeal but instead premised its submissions on the existence of Contract A. The Province took the same approach in its written submissions in this Court. However, during oral argument, there was some passing reference in response to questions that there was no Contract A. In light of the position taken by the Province on its appeal to the Court of Appeal and in its written submissions in this Court, it is now too late to revisit whether there were contractual duties between Tercon and the Province. Even if it were open to the Province to make this argument now, I can see no error in legal principle or any palpable and overriding error of fact in the trial judge’s careful reasons on this point.
[19] The trial judge did not mechanically impose the Contract A/Contract B framework, but considered whether Contract A arose in light of her detailed analysis of the dealings between the parties. That was the right approach. She reviewed in detail the provisions of the RFP which supported her conclusion that there was an intent to create contractual relations upon submission of a compliant bid. She noted, for example, that bids were to be irrevocable for 60 days and that security of $50,000 had to be paid by all proponents and was to be increased to $200,000 by the successful proponent. Any revisions to proposals prior to the closing date had to be in writing, properly executed and received before the closing time. The RFP also set out detailed evaluation criteria and specified that they were to be the only criteria to be used to evaluate proposals. A specific form of alliance agreement was attached. There were detailed provisions about pricing that were fixed and non-negotiable. A proponent was required to accept this form of contract substantially, and security was lost if an agreement was not executed. The Ministry reserved a right to cancel the RFP under s. 2.9 but in such event was obliged to reimburse proponents for costs incurred in preparing their bids up to $15,000 each. Proponents had to submit a signed proposal form, which established that they offered to execute an agreement substantially in the form included in the RFP package. Further, they acknowledged that the security could be forfeited if they were selected as the preferred proponent and failed to enter into good faith discussions with the Ministry to reach an agreement and sign the alliance agreement.
[20] In summary, as the trial judge found, the RFP set out a specifically defined project, invited proposals from a closed and specific list of eligible proponents, and contemplated that proposals would be evaluated according to specific criteria. Negotiation of the alliance construction contract was required, but the negotiation was constrained and did not go to the fundamental details of either the procurement process or the ultimate contract.
[21] There is, therefore, no basis to interfere with the judge’s finding that there was an intent to create contractual obligations upon submission of a compliant bid. I add, however, that the tender call in this case did not give rise to the classic Contract A/Contract B framework in which the bidder submits an irrevocable bid and undertakes to enter into Contract B on those terms if it is accepted. The alliance model process which was used here was more complicated than that and involved good faith negotiations for a Contract B in the form set out in the tender documents. But in my view, this should not distract us from the main question here. We do not have to spell out all of the terms of Contract A, let alone of Contract B, so as to define all of the duties and obligations of both the bidders and the Province. The question here is much narrower: did contractual obligations arise as a result of Tercon’s compliant bid and, if so, was it a term of that contract that the Province would only entertain bids from eligible bidders? The trial judge found offer, acceptance and consideration in the invitation to tender and Tercon’s bid. There is no basis, in my respectful view, to challenge that finding even if it were open to the Province to try to do so at this late stage of the litigation.
4. The Trial Judge’s Finding Concerning Eligibility
[22] It was not contested at trial that only the six original proponents that qualified through the RFEI process were eligible to bid. This point is not in issue on appeal; the question is what this eligibility requirement means. It will be helpful, therefore, to set out the background about this limited eligibility to bid in this tendering process.
[23] To begin, it is worth repeating that there is no doubt that the Province was contractually bound to accept bids only from eligible bidders. This duty may be implied even absent express stipulation. For example, in M.J.B., the Court found that an implied obligation to accept only compliant bids was necessary to give business efficacy to the tendering process, noting, at para. 41, that a bidder must expend effort and incur expense in preparing its bid and must submit bid security and that it is “obvious” that it makes “little sense” for the bidder to comply with these requirements if the owner “is allowed, in effect, to circumscribe this process and accept a non-compliant bid”. But again, whether such a duty should be implied in any given case will depend on the dealings between the parties. Here, however, there is no need to rely on implied terms. The obligation to consider only bids from eligible bidders was stated expressly in the tender documents and in the required ministerial approval of the process which they described.
[24] As noted, in early 2000, the Province issued a RFEI based on a design-build model; the contractor would both design and build the highway. The RFEI contemplated that a short list of three qualified contractors, or teams composed of contractors and consultants, would be nominated as proponents. Each was to provide a description of the legal structure of the team and to describe the role of each team member along with the extent of involvement of each team member as a percentage of the total scope of the project and an organization chart showing each team member’s role. Any change in team management or key positions required notice in writing to the Province which reserved the right to disqualify the proponent if the change materially and negatively affected the ability of the team to carry out the project.
[25] Expressions of interest (“EOI”) were received from six teams including Tercon and Brentwood. The evaluation panel and independent review panel recommended a short list of three proponents with Tercon topping the evaluation. Brentwood was evaluated fifth and was not on the short list. Brentwood was known to lack expertise in drilling and blasting and so its EOI had included an outline of the key team members with that experience. EAC did not participate and had no role in the Brentwood submission. The results of this evaluation were not communicated and the process did not proceed because the Province decided to design the project itself and issue an RFP for an alliance model contract to construct the highway.
[26] It was clear from the outset that only those who had submitted proposals during the RFEI process would be eligible to submit proposals under the RFP. This was specified in the approval of the process by the Minister of Transportation and Highways (“Minister”) before the RFP was issued. It is worth pausing here to briefly look at the Minister’s role.
[27] Pursuant to s. 23 of the Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 311, the legislation in force at the relevant time, the Minister was required to invite public tenders for road construction unless he or she determined that another process would result in competitively established costs for the work. The section provided:
23 (1) The minister must invite tenders by public advertisement, or if that is impracticable, by public notice, for the construction and repair of all government buildings, highways and public works, except for the following:
. . .
(c) if the minister determines that an alternative contracting process will result in competitively established costs for the performance of the work.
(2) The minister must cause all tenders received to be opened in public, at a time and place stated in the advertisement or notice.
(3) The prices must be made known at the time the tenders are opened.
(4) In all cases where the minister believes it is not expedient to let the work to the lowest bidder, the minister must report to and obtain the approval of the Lieutenant Governor in Council before passing by the lowest tender, except if delay would be injurious to the public interest.
. . .
[28]These provisions make clear that the work in this case had to be awarded by public tender, absent the Minister’s approval of an alternative process, and had to be awarded to the lowest bidder, absent approval of the Lieutenant Governor in Council. As noted, ministerial approval was given for an alternative process under s. 23(1)(c). The Minister issued a notice that, pursuant to that section, he approved the process set out in an attached document and had determined it to be an alternative contracting process that would result in competitively established costs for the performance of the work. The attached document outlined in seven numbered paragraphs the process that had been approved.
[29]The document described the background of the public RFEI (which I have set out earlier), noting that only those firms identified through the EOI process would be eligible to submit proposals for the work and that they would receive invitations to do so. The Minister’s approval in fact referred to the firms who had been short-listed from the RFEI process as being eligible. If this were taken to refer only to the three proponents identified by the evaluation process of the RFEI, Tercon would be included but Brentwood would not. However, no one has suggested that anything turns on this and it seems clear that ultimately all six of the RFEI proponents — including both Tercon and Brentwood — were intended to be eligible. The ministerial approval then briefly set out the process. Proposals “by short-listed firms” were to be evaluated “using the considerations set out in the RFP”.
[30]It is clear, therefore, that participation in the RFP process approved by the Minister was limited to those who had participated in the RFEI process.
[31]The Province’s factum implies that the Minister approved inclusion of the exclusion clause in the RFP. However, there is no evidence of this in the record before the Court. The Minister’s approval is before us. It is dated as having been prepared on August 23, 2000 and signed on October 19, 2000, and approves a process outlined in a two-page document attached to it. It says nothing about exclusion of the Province’s liability. The RFP, containing the exclusion clause in issue here, is dated January 15, 2001 and was sent out to eligible bidders under cover of a letter of the same date, some three months after the Minister’s approval.
[32]The RFP is a lengthy document, containing detailed instructions to proponents, required forms, a time schedule of the work, detailed provisions concerning contract pricing, a draft of the ultimate construction contract and many other things. Most relevant for our purposes are the terms of the instructions to proponents and in particular the eligibility requirements for bidders.
[33]The RFP reiterates in unequivocal terms that eligibility to bid was restricted as set out in the ministerial approval. It also underlines the significance of the identity of the proponent. In s. 1.1, the RFP specifies that only the six teams involved in the RFEI would be eligible. The term “proponent”, which refers to a bidder, is defined in s. 8 as “a team that has become eligible to respond to the RFP as described in Section 1.1 of the Instructions to Proponents”. Section 2.8(a) of the RFP stipulates that only the six proponents qualified through the RFEI process were eligible and that proposals received from any other party would not be considered. In short, there were potentially only six participants and “Contract A” could not arise by the submission of a bid from any other party.
[34]The RFP also addressed material changes to the proponent, including changes in the proponent’s team members and its financial ability to undertake and complete the work. Section 2.8(b) of the RFP provided in part as follows:
If in the opinion of the Ministry a material change has occurred to the Proponent since its qualification under the RFEI, including if the composition of the Proponent’s team members has changed . . . or if, for financial or other reasons, the Proponent’s ability to undertake and complete the Work has changed, then the Ministry may request the Proponent to submit further supporting information as the Ministry may request in support of the Proponent’s qualification to perform the Work. If in the sole discretion of the Ministry as a result of the changes the Proponent is not sufficiently qualified to perform the Work then the Ministry reserves the right to disqualify that Proponent, and reject its Proposal.
[35]The proponent was to provide an organization chart outlining the proponent’s team members, structure and roles. If the team members were different from the RFEI process submission, an explanation was to be provided for the changes: s. 4.2(b)i). A list of subcontractors and suppliers was also to be provided and the Ministry had to be notified of any changes: s. 4.2(e).
[36]The RFP provided proponents with a mechanism to determine whether they remained qualified to submit a proposal. If a proponent was concerned about its eligibility as a result of a material change, it could make a preliminary submission to the Ministry describing the nature of the changes and the Ministry would give a written decision as to whether the proponent was still qualified: s. 2.8(b).
[37]Brentwood tried to take advantage of this process. The trial judge thoroughly outlined this, at paras. 17-23 of her reasons. In brief, Brentwood lacked expertise in drilling and blasting and by the time the RFP was issued, it faced limited local bonding capacity due to commitments to other projects, a shorter construction period, the potential unavailability of subcontractors and limited equipment to perform the work. It in fact considered not bidding at all. Instead, however, it entered into a pre-bidding agreement with EAC that the work would be undertaken by a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC and that upon being awarded the work, they would enter into a joint venture agreement and would share 50/50 the costs, expenses, losses and gains. The trial judge noted that it was common in the industry for contractors to agree to a joint venture on the basis of a pre-bid agreement with the specifics of the joint venture to be worked out once the contract was awarded and that Brentwood and EAC acted consistently throughout in accordance with this industry standard.
[38]Brentwood sent the Province’s project manager, Mr. Tasaka, a preliminary submission as provided for in s. 2.8(b) of the RFP, advising of a material change in its team’s structure in that it wished to form a joint venture with EAC. This was done, the trial judge found, because Brentwood thought it would be disqualified if it submitted a proposal as a joint venture without the Ministry’s prior approval under this section of the RFP. The Province never responded in writing as it ought to have according to s. 2.8(b).
[39]It seems to have been assumed by everyone that a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC was not eligible because this change would not simply be a change in the composition of the bidder’s team, but in effect a new bidder. Without reviewing in detail all of the evidence referred to by the trial judge, it is fair to say that although Brentwood ultimately submitted a proposal in its own name, the proposal in substance was from the Brentwood/EAC joint venture and was evaluated as such. As the trial judge concluded:
The substance of the proposal was as a joint venture and this must have been apparent to all. The [project evaluation panel] approved Brentwood/EAC as joint venturers as the preferred proponent. The [panel] was satisfied that Tercon had the capacity and commitment to do the job but preferred the joint venture submission of Brentwood/EAC. [para. 53]
[40]There was some suggestion by the Province during oral argument that the trial judge had wrongly imposed on it a duty to investigate Brentwood’s bid, a duty rejected by the majority of the Court in Double N Earthmovers Ltd. v. Edmonton (City), 2007 SCC 3, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 116. In my view, the trial judge did no such thing. As her detailed findings make clear, the Province: (1) fully understood that the Brentwood bid was in fact on behalf of a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC; (2) thought that a bid from that joint venture was not eligible; and (3) took active steps to obscure the reality of the situation. No investigation was required for the Province to know these things and the judge imposed no duty to engage in one.
5. The Province’s Submissions
[41]I will address the Province’s first two points together:
(i) a joint venture is not a legal person and therefore the Province could not and did not contract with a joint venture; and
(ii) it did not award the contract to EAC and EAC had no contractual responsibility to the Province for failure to perform the contract.
[42]I cannot accept these submissions. The issue is not, as these arguments assume, whether the Province contracted with a joint venture or whether EAC had contractual obligations to the Province. The issue is whether the Province considered an ineligible bid; the point of substance is whether the bid was from an eligible bidder.
[43]At trial there was no contest that a bid from a joint venture involving an ineligible bidder would be ineligible. The Province’s position was that there was no need to look beyond the face of the bid to determine who was bidding: the proposal was in the name of Brentwood and therefore the bid was from a compliant bidder. Respectfully, I see no error in the trial judge’s rejection of this position. There was a mountain of evidence to support the judge’s conclusions that first, Brentwood’s bid, in fact if not in form, was on behalf of a joint venture between itself and EAC; second, the Province knew this and took the position that it could not consider a bid from or award the work to that joint venture; third, the existence of the joint venture was a material consideration in favour of the Brentwood bid during the evaluation process; and finally, that steps were taken by revising and drafting documentation to obfuscate the reality of the situation.
[44]Brentwood was one of the original RFEI proponents and was of course eligible to bid, subject to material changes in the composition of its team. EAC had not submitted a proposal during the RFEI process. It had been involved in advising the Ministry in relation to the project in 1998 and, in the fall of 2000, the Ministry had asked EAC to prepare an internal bid for comparison purposes (although EAC did not do so) as EAC was not entitled to bid on the Project.
[45]As noted earlier, after the RFP was issued, Brentwood and EAC entered into a pre-bidding agreement that provided that the work would be undertaken in the name of Brentwood/Anderson, a joint venture, that the work would be sponsored and managed by the joint venture and that upon being awarded the contract, the parties would enter into a joint venture agreement. Brentwood advised the Ministry in writing that it was forming a joint venture with EAC “to submit a more competitive price”; this fax was in effect a preliminary submission contemplated by s. 2.8(b) of the RFP and was written, as the trial judge found, because Brentwood assumed that it could be disqualified if it submitted a proposal as a joint venture unless prior arrangements had been made. The Province never responded in writing to this preliminary submission, as required by s. 2.8(b). There were, however, discussions with the Province’s project manager, Mr. Tasaka who, the trial judge found, understood that a joint venture from Brentwood and EAC would not be eligible. As the judge put it, the Province’s position appears to have been that the Brentwood/EAC proposal could proceed as long as the submission was in the name of Brentwood.
[46]In the result, EAC was listed in the ultimate submission as a “major member” of the team. The legal relationship with EAC was not specified and EAC was listed as a subcontractor even though, as the trial judge found, their relationship bore no resemblance to a standard subcontractor agreement. The trial judge found as facts — and these findings are not challenged — that Brentwood and EAC always intended between themselves to form a joint venture and to formalize that arrangement once the contract was secured, and further, that the role of EAC was purposefully obfuscated in the bid to avoid an apparent conflict with s. 2.8(a) of the RFP.
[47]During the selection process, it became clear that the bid was in reality on behalf of a joint venture. The project evaluation panel (“PEP”) requested better information than provided in the bid about the structure of the business arrangements between Brentwood and EAC. Brentwood responded by disclosing the pre-bid agreement between them to form a 50/50 joint venture if successful. The PEP understood from this that Brentwood and EAC had a similar interest in the risk and reward under the contract and that this helped satisfy them that the “risk/reward” aspect of the alliance contract could be negotiated with them flexibly. The PEP clearly did not consider EAC to be a subcontractor although shown as such in the bid. In its step 6 report, the PEP consistently referred to the proponent as being a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC or as “Brentwood/EAC” and the trial judge found that it was on the basis that they were indeed a joint venture that PEP approved Brentwood/EAC as the preferred proponent. This step 6 report was ultimately revised to refer only to the Brentwood team as the official proponent. The trial judge found as a fact that this revision was made because “it was apparent that a joint venture was not eligible to submit a proposal” (para. 56).
[48]The findings of the trial judge and the record make it clear that it was no mere question of form rather than a matter of substance whether the bidder was Brentwood with other team members or, as it in fact was, the Brentwood/EAC joint venture. As she noted, at para. 121 of her reasons, the whole purpose of the joint venture was to allow submission of a more competitive price than it would have been able to do as a proponent with a team as allowed under s. 2.8(b) of the RFP. The joint venture permitted a 50/50 sharing of risk and reward and co-management of the project while at the same time avoiding the restrictions on subcontracting in the tendering documents. As the judge put it, the bid by the joint venture constituted “material non-compliance” with the tendering contract: “. . . the joint venture with EAC allowed Brentwood to put forward a more competitive price than contemplated under the RFEI proposal. This went to the essence of the tendering process” (para. 126).
[49]The Province suggests that the trial judge’s reasons allow form to triumph over substance. In my view, it is the Province’s position that better deserves that description. It had a bid which it knew to be on behalf of a joint venture, encouraged the bid to proceed and took steps to obfuscate the reality that it was on behalf of a joint venture. Permitting the bid to proceed in this way gave the joint venture a competitive advantage in the bidding process, and the record could not be clearer that the joint venture nature of the bid was one of its attractions during the selection process. The Province nonetheless submits that so long as only the name of Brentwood appears on the bid and ultimate Contract B, all is well. If ever a submission advocated placing form above substance, this is it.
[50]It is true that the Province had legal advice and did not proceed in defiance of it. However, the facts as found by the trial judge about this legal advice hardly advance the Province’s position. The judge found that the Province’s lawyer was not aware of the background relevant to the question of whether the Brentwood bid was eligible, never reviewed the proponent eligibility requirements in the RFP and was not asked to and did not direct his mind to the question of eligibility. As the trial judge put it, the lawyer “appears to have operated on the assumption that Brentwood had been irreversibly selected” (para. 70).
[51]The Brentwood/EAC joint venture having been selected as the preferred proponent, negotiations for the alliance contract ensued. The trial judge found that by this time, all agreed that a joint venture was not an eligible proponent and the Ministry was taking the position that the contract could not be in the name of the joint venture. Brentwood and EAC executed a revised pre-contract agreement that provided, notwithstanding the letter of intent from the Ministry addressed to Brentwood indicating that the legal relationship between them would be contractor/subcontractor, the contract would be performed and the profits shared equally between them. The work was to be managed by a committee with equal representation, the bond required by the owner was to be provided by both parties and EAC indemnified Brentwood against half of any loss or cost incurred as a result of performance of the work. According to schedule B4 of the RFP, all subcontracts were to be attached to the RFP but no contract between Brentwood and EAC was ever provided or attached to the proposal.
[52]The Province has identified no palpable and overriding error in these many findings of fact by the trial judge. I conclude, therefore, that we must approach the case on the basis of the judge’s finding that the bid was in fact, if not in form, submitted by a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC, that the Ministry was well aware of this, that the existence of the joint venture was a material consideration in favour of the bid during the evaluation process and that by bidding as a joint venture, Brentwood was given a competitive advantage in the bidding process.
[53]I reject the Ministry’s submissions that all that matters is the form and not the substance of the arrangement. In my view, the trial judge’s finding that this bid was in fact on behalf of a joint venture is unassailable.
[54]I turn to the Province’s third point:
(iii) there was no term of the RFP that restricted the right of proponents to enter into joint venture agreements with others; this arrangement merely left Brentwood, the original proponent in place and allowed it to enhance its ability to perform the work.
[55]This submission addresses the question of whether the joint venture was an eligible bidder. The Province submits that it is, arguing that s. 2.8(b) of the RFP shows that the RFP contemplated that each proponent would be supported by a team, that the composition of the team might change and that the Province under that section retained the right to approve or reject changes in the team of any proponent. I cannot accept these submissions.
[56]Section 2.8 must be read as a whole and in light of the ministerial approval which I have described earlier. Section 2.8(a), consistent with that approval, stipulates that only the six proponents qualified through the RFEI process were eligible to submit responses and that proposals from any other party “shall not be considered”. The word “proponent” is defined in s. 8 as a team that has become eligible to respond to the RFP. The material change provisions in s. 2.8(b) should not be read as negating the express provisions of the RFP and the ministerial approval of the process. When read as a whole, the provisions about material change do not permit the addition of a new entity as occurred here. The process actually followed was not the one specified in the bidding contract and was not authorized by the statute because it was not the one approved by the Minister.
[57]Moreover, even if one were to conclude (and I would not) that this change from the Brentwood team that participated in the RFEI to the Brentwood/EAC joint venture by whom the bid was submitted could fall within the material change provisions of s. 2.8(b), the Province never gave a written decision to permit this change as required by that provision. As the trial judge noted, in fact the Province’s position was that such a bid would not be eligible and its agents took steps to obfuscate the true proponent in the relevant documentation.
[58]The trial judge also found that there was an implied obligation of good faith in the contract and that the Province breached this obligation by failing to treat all bidders equally by changing the terms of eligibility to Brentwood’s competitive advantage. This conclusion strongly reinforces the trial judge’s decision about eligibility. Rather than repeating her detailed findings, I will simply quote her summary at para. 138:
The whole of [the Province’s] conduct leaves me with no doubt that the [Province] breached the duty of fairness to [Tercon] by changing the terms of eligibility to Brentwood’s competitive advantage. At best, [the Province] ignored significant information to its [i.e. Tercon’s] detriment. At worst, the [Province] covered up its knowledge that the successful proponent was an ineligible joint venture. In the circumstances here, it is not open to the [Province] to say that a joint venture was only proposed. Nor can the [Province] say that it was unaware of the joint venture when it acted deliberately to structure contract B to include EAC as fully responsible within a separate contract with Brentwood, so minimizing the [Province’s] risk that the contract would be unenforceable against EAC if arrangements did not work out. . . . The [Province] was . . . prepared to take the risk that unsuccessful bidders would sue: this risk did materialize.
[59]To conclude on this point, I find no fault with the trial judge’s conclusion that the bid was in fact submitted on behalf of a joint venture of Brentwood and EAC which was an ineligible bidder under the terms of the RFP. This breached not only the express eligibility provisions of the tender documents, but also the implied duty to act fairly towards all bidders.
B. The Exclusion Clause
1. Introduction
[60]As noted, the RFP includes an exclusion clause which reads as follows:
2.10 . . .
Except as expressly and specifically permitted in these Instructions to Proponents, no Proponent shall have any claim for compensation of any kind whatsoever, as a result of participating in this RFP, and by submitting a Proposal each Proponent shall be deemed to have agreed that it has no claim. [Emphasis added.]
[61]The trial judge held that as a matter of construction, the clause did not bar recovery for the breaches she had found. The clause, in her view, was ambiguous and, applying the contra proferentem principle, she resolved the ambiguity in Tercon’s favour. She also found that the Province’s breach was fundamental and that it was not fair or reasonable to enforce the exclusion clause in light of the nature of the Province’s breach. The Province contends that the judge erred both with respect to the construction of the clause and her application of the doctrine of fundamental breach.
[62]On the issue of fundamental breach in relation to exclusion clauses, my view is that the time has come to lay this doctrine to rest, as Dickson C.J. was inclined to do more than 20 years ago: Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 426, at p. 462. I agree with the analytical approach that should be followed when tackling an issue relating to the applicability of an exclusion clause set out by my colleague Binnie J. However, I respectfully do not agree with him on the question of the proper interpretation of the clause in issue here. In my view, the clause does not exclude Tercon’s claim for damages, and even if I am wrong about that, the clause is at best ambiguous and should be construed contra proferentem as the trial judge held. As a result of my conclusion on the interpretation issue, I do not have to go on to apply the rest of the analytical framework set out by Binnie J.
[63]In my view, the exclusion clause does not cover the Province’s breaches in this case. The RFP process put in place by the Province was premised on a closed list of bidders; a contest with an ineligible bidder was not part of the RFP process and was in fact expressly precluded by its terms. A “Contract A” could not arise as a result of submission of a bid from any other party. However, as a result of how the Province proceeded, the very premise of its own RFP process was missing, and the work was awarded to a party who could not be a participant in the RFP process. That is what Tercon is complaining about. Tercon’s claim is not barred by the exclusion clause because the clause only applies to claims arising “as a result of participating in [the] RFP”, not to claims resulting from the participation of other, ineligible parties. Moreover, the words of this exclusion clause, in my view, are not effective to limit liability for breach of the Province’s implied duty of fairness to bidders. I will explain my conclusion by turning first to a brief account of the key legal principles and then to the facts of the case.
2. Legal Principles
[64]The key principle of contractual interpretation here is that the words of one provision must not be read in isolation but should be considered in harmony with the rest of the contract and in light of its purposes and commercial context. The approach adopted by the Court in M.J.B. is instructive. The Court had to interpret a privilege clause, which is somewhat analogous to the exclusion clause in issue here. The privilege clause provided that the lowest or any tender would not necessarily be accepted, and the issue was whether this barred a claim based on breach of an implied term that the owner would accept only compliant bids. In interpreting the privilege clause, the Court looked at its text in light of the contract as a whole, its purposes and commercial context. As Iacobucci J. said, at para. 44, “the privilege clause is only one term of Contract A and must be read in harmony with the rest of the tender documents. To do otherwise would undermine the rest of the agreement between the parties.”
[65]In a similar way, it is necessary in the present case to consider the exclusion clause in the RFP in light of its purposes and commercial context as well as of its overall terms. The question is whether the exclusion of compensation for claims resulting from “participating in this RFP”, properly interpreted, excludes liability for the Province having unfairly considered a bid from a bidder who was not supposed to have been participating in the RFP process at all.
3. Application to This Case
[66]Having regard to both the text of the clause in its broader context and to the purposes and commercial context of the RFP, my view is that this claim does not fall within the terms of the exclusion clause.
[67]To begin, it is helpful to recall that in interpreting tendering contracts, the Court has been careful to consider the special commercial context of tendering. Effective tendering ultimately depends on the integrity and business efficacy of the tendering process: see, e.g., Martel, at para. 88; M.J.B., at para. 41; Double N Earthmovers, at para. 106. As Iacobucci and Major JJ. put it in Martel, at para. 116, “it is imperative that all bidders be treated on an equal footing . . . . Parties should at the very least be confident that their initial bids will not be skewed by some underlying advantage in the drafting of the call for tenders conferred upon only one potential bidder.”
[68]This factor is particularly weighty in the context of public procurement. In that context, in addition to the interests of the parties, there is the need for transparency for the public at large. This consideration is underlined by the statutory provisions which governed the tendering process in this case. Their purpose was to assure transparency and fairness in public tenders. As was said by Orsborn J. (as he then was) in Cahill (G.J.) & Co. (1979) Ltd. v. Newfoundland and Labrador (Minister of Municipal and Provincial Affairs), 2005 NLTD 129, 250 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 145, at para. 35:
The owner — in this case the government — is in control of the tendering process and may define the parameters for a compliant bid and a compliant bidder. The corollary to this, of course, is that once the owner — here the government — sets the rules, it must itself play by those rules in assessing the bids and awarding the main contract.
[69]One aspect that is generally seen as contributing to the integrity and business efficacy of the tendering process is the requirement that only compliant bids be considered. As noted earlier, such a requirement has often been implied because, as the Court said in M.J.B., it makes little sense to think that a bidder would comply with the bidding process if the owner could circumscribe it by accepting a non-compliant bid. Respectfully, it seems to me to make even less sense to think that eligible bidders would participate in the RFP if the Province could avoid liability for ignoring an express term concerning eligibility to bid on which the entire RFP was premised and which was mandated by the statutorily approved process.
[70]The closed list of bidders was the foundation of this RFP and there were important competitive advantages to a bidder who could side-step that limitation. Thus, it seems to me that both the integrity and the business efficacy of the tendering process support an interpretation that would allow the exclusion clause to operate compatibly with the eligibility limitations that were at the very root of the RFP.
[71]The same may be said with respect to the implied duty of fairness. As Iacobucci and Major JJ. wrote for the Court in Martel, at para. 88, “[i]mplying an obligation to treat all bidders fairly and equally is consistent with the goal of protecting and promoting the integrity of the bidding process.” It seems to me that clear language is necessary to exclude liability for breach of such a basic requirement of the tendering process, particularly in the case of public procurement.
[72]The proper interpretation of the exclusion clause should also take account of the statutory context which I have reviewed earlier. The restriction on eligibility of bidders was a key element of the alternative process approved by the Minister. It seems unlikely, therefore, that the parties intended through this exclusion clause to effectively gut a key aspect of the approved process. Of course, it is true that the exclusion clause does not bar all remedies, but only claims for compensation. However, the fact remains that as a practical matter, there are unlikely to be other, effective remedies for considering and accepting an ineligible bid and that barring compensation for a breach of that nature in practical terms renders the ministerial approval process virtually meaningless. Whatever administrative law remedies may be available, they are not likely to be effective remedies for awarding a contract to an ineligible bidder. The Province did not submit that injunctive relief would have been an option, and I can, in any event, foresee many practical problems that need not detain us here in seeking such relief in these circumstances.
[73]The Province stresses Tercon’s commercial sophistication, in effect arguing that it agreed to the exclusion clause and must accept the consequences. This line of argument, however, has two weaknesses. It assumes the answer to the real question before us which is: what does the exclusion clause mean? The consequences of agreeing to the exclusion clause depend on its construction. In addition, the Province’s submission overlooks its own commercial sophistication and the fact that sophisticated parties can draft very clear exclusion and limitation clauses when they are minded to do so. Such clauses contrast starkly with the curious clause which the Province inserted into this RFP. The limitation of liability clause in Hunter, for example, provided that “[n]otwithstanding any other provision in this contract or any applicable statutory provisions neither the Seller nor the Buyer shall be liable to the other for special or consequential damages or damages for loss of use arising directly or indirectly from any breach of this contract, fundamental or otherwise” (p. 450). The Court found this to be clear and unambiguous. The limitation clause in issue in Guarantee Co. of North America v. Gordon Capital Corp., [1999] 3 S.C.R. 423, provided that legal proceedings for the recovery of “any loss hereunder shall not be brought . . . after the expiration of 24 months from the discovery of such loss” (para. 5). Once again, the Court found this language clear. The Ontario Court of Appeal similarly found the language of a limitation of liability clause to be clear in Fraser Jewellers (1982) Ltd. v. Dominion Electric Protection Co. (1997), 34 O.R. (3d) 1. The clause provided in part that if the defendant “should be found liable for loss, damage or injury due to a failure of service or equipment in any respect, its liability shall be limited to a sum equal to 100% of the annual service charge or $10,000.00, whichever is less, as the agreed upon damages and not as a penalty, as the exclusive remedy” (p. 4). These, and many other cases which might be referred to, demonstrate that sophisticated parties are capable of drafting clear and comprehensive limitation and exclusion provisions.
[74]I turn to the text of the clause which the Province inserted in its RFP. It addresses claims that result from “participating in this RFP”. As noted, the limitation on who could participate in this RFP was one of its premises. These words must, therefore, be read in light of the limit on who was eligible to participate in this RFP. As noted earlier, both the ministerial approval and the text of the RFP itself were unequivocal: only the six proponents qualified through the earlier RFEI process were eligible and proposals received from any other party would not be considered. Thus, central to “participating in this RFP” was participating in a contest among those eligible to participate. A process involving other bidders, as the trial judge found the process followed by the Province to be, is not the process called for by “this RFP” and being part of that other process is not in any meaningful sense “participating in this RFP”.
[75]The Province would have us interpret the phrase excluding compensation “as a result of participating in this RFP” to mean that compensation is excluded that results from “submitting a Proposal”. However, that interpretation is not consistent with the wording of the clause as a whole. The clause concludes with the phrase that “by submitting a Proposal each Proponent shall be deemed to have agreed that it has no claim”. If the phrases “participating in this RFP” and “submitting a Proposal” were intended to mean the same thing, it is hard to understand why different words were used in the same short clause to express the same idea. The fact that the Minister had approved a closed list of participants strengthens the usual inference that the use of different words was deliberate so as not to exclude compensation for a departure from that basic eligibility requirement.
[76]This interpretation of the exclusion clause does not rob it of meaning, but makes it compatible with other provisions of the RFP. There is a parallel between this case and the Court’s decision in M.J.B. There, the Court found that there was compatibility between the privilege clause and the implied term to accept only compliant bids. Similarly, in this case, there is compatibility between the eligibility requirements of the RFP and the exclusion clause. Not any and every claim based on any and every deviation from the RFP provisions would escape the preclusive effect of the exclusion clause. It is only when the defect in the Province’s adherence to the RFP process is such that it is completely outside that process that the exclusion clause cannot have been intended to operate. What is important here, in my view, is that the RFP in its conception, in its express provisions and in the statutorily required approval it was given, was premised on limiting eligibility to the six proponents in the RFEI process. Competition among others was not at all contemplated and was not part of the RFP process; in fact, the RFP expressly excluded that possibility. In short, limiting eligibility of bidders to those who had responded to the RFEI was the foundation of the whole RFP. As the judge found, acceptance of a bid from an ineligible bidder “attacks the underlying premise of the process” established by the RFP: para. 146. Liability for such an attack is not excluded by a clause limiting compensation resulting from participation in this RFP.
[77]This interpretation is also supported by another provision of the RFP. Under s. 2.9, as mentioned earlier, the Province reserved to itself the right to unilaterally cancel the RFP and the right to propose a new RFP allowing additional bidders. If the exclusion clause were broad enough to exclude compensation for allowing ineligible bidders to participate, there seems to be little purpose in this reservation of the ability to cancel the RFP and issue a new one to a wider circle of bidders. It is also significant that the Province did not reserve to itself the right to accept a bid from an ineligible bidder or to unilaterally change the rules of eligibility. The RFP expressly did exactly the opposite. None of this, in my opinion, supports the view that the exclusion clause should be read as applying to the Province’s conduct in this case.
[78]To hold otherwise seems to me to be inconsistent with the text of the clause read in the context of the RFP as a whole and in light of its purposes and commercial context. In short, I cannot accept the contention that, by agreeing to exclude compensation for participating in this RFP process, the parties could have intended to exclude a damages claim resulting from the Province unfairly permitting a bidder to participate who was not eligible to do so. I cannot conclude that the provision was intended to gut the RFP’s eligibility requirements as to who may participate in it, or to render meaningless the Minister’s statutorily required approval of the alternative process where this was a key element. The provision, as well, was not intended to allow the Province to escape a damages claim for applying different eligibility criteria, to the competitive disadvantage of other bidders and for taking steps designed to disguise the true state of affairs. I cannot conclude that the parties, through the words found in this exclusion clause, intended to waive compensation for conduct like that of the Province in this case that strikes at the heart of the integrity and business efficacy of the tendering process which it undertook.
[79]If I am wrong about my interpretation of the clause, I would hold, as did the trial judge, that its language is at least ambiguous. If, as the Province contends, the phrase “participating in this RFP” could reasonably mean “submitting a Proposal”, that phrase could also reasonably mean “competing against the other eligible participants”. Any ambiguity in the context of this contract requires that the clause be interpreted against the Province and in favour of Tercon under the principle contra proferentem: see, e.g., Hillis Oil and Sales Ltd. v. Wynn’s Canada, Ltd., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 57, at pp. 68-69. Following this approach, the clause would not apply to bar Tercon’s damages claim.
V. Disposition
[80]I conclude that the judge did not err in finding that the Province breached the tendering contract or in finding that Tercon’s remedy in damages for that breach was not precluded by the exclusion clause in the contract. I would therefore allow the appeal, set aside the order of the Court of Appeal and restore the judgment of the trial judge. The parties advise that the question of costs has been resolved between them and that therefore no order in relation to costs is required.
The reasons of McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, Abella and Rothstein JJ. were delivered by
[81]Binnie J. (dissenting) — The important legal issue raised by this appeal is whether, and in what circumstances, a court will deny a defendant contract breaker the benefit of an exclusion of liability clause to which the innocent party, not being under any sort of disability, has agreed. Traditionally, this has involved consideration of what is known as the doctrine of fundamental breach, a doctrine which Dickson C.J. in Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 426, suggested should be laid to rest 21 years ago (p. 462).
[82]On this occasion we should again attempt to shut the coffin on the jargon associated with “fundamental breach”. Categorizing a contract breach as “fundamental” or “immense” or “colossal” is not particularly helpful. Rather, the principle is that a court has no discretion to refuse to enforce a valid and applicable contractual exclusion clause unless the plaintiff (here the appellant Tercon) can point to some paramount consideration of public policy sufficient to override the public interest in freedom of contact and defeat what would otherwise be the contractual rights of the parties. Tercon points to the public interest in the transparency and integrity of the government tendering process (in this case, for a highway construction contract) but in my view such a concern, while important, did not render unenforceable the terms of the contract Tercon agreed to. There is nothing inherently unreasonable about exclusion clauses. Tercon is a large and sophisticated corporation. Unlike my colleague Justice Cromwell, I would hold that the respondent Ministry’s conduct, while in breach of its contractual obligations, fell within the terms of the exclusion clause. In turn, there is no reason why the clause should not be enforced. I would dismiss the appeal.
I. Overview
[83]This appeal concerns a contract to build a $35 million road in the remote Nass Valley of British Columbia (the “Kincolith project”). The respondent Ministry accepted a bid from Brentwood Enterprises Ltd. that did not comply with the terms of tender. Tercon, as the disappointed finalist in the bidding battle, seeks compensation equivalent to the profit it expected to earn had it been awarded the contract.
[84]Tercon alleged, and the trial judge found, that although the winning bid was submitted in the name of Brentwood (an eligible bidder), Brentwood in fact intended, with the Ministry’s knowledge and encouragement, to do the work in a co-venture with an ineligible bidder, Emil Anderson Construction Co. (“EAC”). The respondent Ministry raised a number of defences including the fact that the formal contract was signed in the name of Brentwood alone. This defence was rejected in the courts below. The Ministry’s substantial defence in this Court is that even if it failed to abide by the bidding rules, it is nonetheless protected by an exclusion of compensation clause set out clearly in the request for proposals (“RFP”). The clause provided that “no Proponent shall have any claim for compensation of any kind whatsoever, as a result of participating in this RFP” and that “by submitting a Proposal each Proponent shall be deemed to have agreed that it has no claim” (s. 2.10 of the RFP).
[85]The appeal thus brings into conflict the public policy that favours a fair, open and transparent bid process, and the freedom of contract of sophisticated and experienced parties in a commercial environment to craft their own contractual relations. I agree with Tercon that the public interest favours an orderly and fair scheme for tendering in the construction industry, but there is also a public interest in leaving knowledgeable parties free to order their own commercial affairs. In my view, on the facts of this case, the Court should not rewrite — nor should the Court refuse to give effect to — the terms agreed to by the parties.
[86]I accept, as did the courts below, that the respondent Ministry breached the terms of its own RFP when it contracted with Brentwood, knowing the work would be carried out by a co-venture with Brentwood and EAC. The addition of EAC, a bigger contractor with greater financial resources than Brentwood, created a stronger competitor for Tercon than Brentwood alone. However, I also agree with the B.C. Court of Appeal that the exclusion of compensation clause is clear and unambiguous and that no legal ground or rule of law permits us to override the freedom of the parties to contract (or to decline to contract) with respect to this particular term, or to relieve Tercon against its operation in this case.
II. The Tendering Process
[87]For almost three decades, the law governing a structured bidding process has been dominated by the concept of Contract A/Contract B initially formulated in The Queen in right of Ontario v. Ron Engineering & Construction (Eastern) Ltd., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 111. The analysis advanced by Estey J. in that case was that the bidding process, as defined by the terms of the tender call, may create contractual relations (“Contract A”) prior in time and quite independently of the contract that is the actual subject matter of the bid (“Contract B”). Breach of Contract A may, depending on its terms, give rise to contractual remedies for non-performance even if Contract B is never entered into or, as in the present case, it is awarded to a competitor. The result of this legal construct is to provide unsuccessful bidders with a contractual remedy against an owner who departs from its own bidding rules. Contract A, however, arises (if at all) as a matter of interpretation. It is not imposed as a rule of law.
[88]In Ron Engineering, the result of Estey J.’s analysis was that as a matter of contractual interpretation, the Ontario government was allowed to retain a $150,000 bid bond put up by Ron Engineering even though the government was told, a little over an hour after the bids were opened, that Ron Engineering had made a $750,058 error in the calculation of its bid and wished to withdraw it. Estey J. held:
The contractor was not asked to sign a contract which diverged in any way from its tender but simply to sign a contract in accordance with the instructions to tenderers and in conformity with its own tender. [p. 127]
In other words, harsh as it may have seemed to Ron Engineering, the parties were held to their bargain. The Court was not prepared to substitute “fair and reasonable” terms for what the parties had actually agreed to.
[89]In M.J.B. Enterprises Ltd. v. Defence Construction (1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619, Contract A included a “privilege” clause which stated that the owner was not obliged to accept the lowest or any tender. The Court implied a term, based on the presumed intention of the parties, that notwithstanding the privilege clause, only compliant bids were open to acceptance. While the owner was not obliged to accept the lowest compliant bid, the privilege clause did not, as a matter of contractual interpretation, give the owner “the privilege” of accepting a non-compliant bid. M.J.B. stops short of the issue in the present appeal because in that case, there was a breach of Contract A but no clause purporting to exclude liability on the part of the owner to pay compensation in the event of a Contract A violation.
[90]In Naylor Group Inc. v. Ellis-Don Construction Ltd., 2001 SCC 58, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 943, the Court enforced the rules of the bid depository system against a contractor whose bid was based on what turned out to be a mistaken view of its collective bargaining status with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The Court again affirmed that “[t]he existence and content of Contract A will depend on the facts of the particular case” (para. 36). Ellis-Don sought relief from its bid on the basis of a labour board decision rendered subsequent to its bid that upheld, to its surprise, the bargaining rights of the union. This Court held that no relief was contemplated in the circumstances under Contract A and none was afforded, even though this was a costly result when viewed from the perspective of Ellis-Don.
[91]In Martel Building Ltd. v. Canada, 2000 SCC 60, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 860, citing M.J.B., the Court implied a term in Contract A obligating the owner to be fair and consistent in the assessment of tender bids. On the facts, the disappointed bidder’s claim of unfair treatment was rejected.
[92] Finally, in Double N Earthmovers Ltd. v. Edmonton (City), 2007 SCC 3, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 116, the unsuccessful bidder claimed that Edmonton had accepted, in breach of Contract A, a competitor’s non-compliant bid to provide heavy equipment of a certain age to move refuse at a waste disposal site. The Court refused to imply a term “requiring an owner to investigate to see if bidders will really do what they promised in their tender” (para. 50). Accepting the existence of a duty of “fairness and equality”, the majority nevertheless held that “[t]he best way to make sure that all bids receive the same treatment is for an owner to weigh bids on the basis of what is actually in the bid, not to weigh them on the basis of subsequently discovered information” (para. 52). In other words, the majority’s interpretation of the express terms of Contract A was enforced despite Double N Earthmovers’ complaint of double dealing by the owner.
[93]On the whole, therefore, while Ron Engineering and its progeny have encouraged the establishment of a fair and transparent bidding process, Contract A continues to be based not on some abstract externally imposed rule of law but on the presumed (and occasionally implied) intent of the parties. Only in rare circumstances will the Court relieve a party from the bargain it has made.
[94]As to implied terms, M.J.B. emphasized (at para. 29) that the focus is “the intentions of the actual parties”. A court, when dealing with a claim to an implied term, “must be careful not to slide into determining the intentions of reasonable parties” (emphasis in original). Thus, “if there is evidence of a contrary intention, on the part of either party, an implied term may not be found on this basis”.
[95]Tercon is a large and experienced contractor. As noted by Donald J.A. in the B.C. Court of Appeal, it had earlier “successfully recovered damages from the [Ministry] on a bidding default in a previous case” (2007 BCCA 592, 73 B.C.L.R. (4th) 201, at para. 15). See Tercon Contractors Ltd. v. British Columbia (1993), 9 C.L.R. (2d) 197 (B.C.S.C.), aff’d [1994] B.C.J. No. 2658 (QL) (C.A.). Thus Tercon would have been more sensitive than most contractors to the risks posed by an exclusion of compensation clause. It nevertheless chose to bid on the project on the terms proposed by the Ministry.
III. Tercon’s Claim for Relief From the Exclusionary Clause It Agreed to
[96]In these circumstances, the first question is whether there is either a statutory legal obstacle to, or a principled legal argument against, the freedom of these parties to contract out of the obligation that would otherwise exist for the Ministry to pay compensation for a breach of Contract A. If not, the second question is whether there is any other barrier to the court’s enforcement of the exclusionary clause in the circumstances that occurred. On the first branch, Tercon relies on the Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 311 (“Transportation Act” or the “Act”). On the second branch, Tercon relies on the doctrine of fundamental breach.
A. The Statutory Argument
[97]Section 4 of the Transportation Act provides that before awarding a highway contract, “the minister must invite tenders in any manner that will make the invitation for tenders reasonably available to the public”, but then provides for several exceptions: “The minister need not invite tenders for a project . . . if . . . (c) the minister believes that an alternative contracting process will result in a competitively established cost for the project”. Here the required ministerial authorization was obtained for an “alternative process”. The reason is as follows. As noted by Cromwell J., the Ministry’s original idea was to use a “design-build” model where a single contractor would design and build the highway for a fixed price. The Ministry issued a request for expressions of interest (“RFEI”) which attracted six responses. One was from Tercon. Another was from Brentwood. EAC declined to bid because it did not think the “design-build” concept was appropriate for the job.
[98]On further reflection, the Ministry decided not to pursue the design-build approach. It decided to design the highway itself. The contract would be limited to construction, as EAC had earlier advocated. EAC was not allowed to bid despite the Ministry coming around to its point of view on the proper way to tender the project. The Ministry limited bidding on the new contest to the six respondents to the original RFEI, all of whom had been found capable of performing the contract. But to do so, it needed, and did obtain, the Minister’s s. 4 approval.
[99]A question arose during the hearing of the appeal as to whether the Minister actually approved an “alternative process” that not only restricted eligibility to the six participants in the RFEI process (an advantage to Tercon and the other five participants), but also contained the “no claims” clause excluding compensation for non-observance of its terms (no doubt considered a disadvantage). In its factum, the Ministry states:
In this case, the Minister approved an alternate process under [s. 4(2) of the B.C. Transportation Act]. That process was set out in the Instructions to Proponents, which included the No Claim Clause. Having been approved by the Minister, the package (including the No Claim Clause) complied with section 4 of the Transportation Act. [para. 70]
[100] Tercon argued at the hearing of this appeal that as a matter of law, Contract A could not have included the exclusion clause because
[t]he policy of the [Transportation Act] is to ensure that the Ministry is accountable; to preserve confidence in the integrity of the tendering process. To ensure that is so and that the Minister is accountable, the Ministry must be held liable for its breach of Contract A in considering and accepting a proposal from the joint venture . . . .
. . .
MADAM JUSTICE ABELLA: Can I just ask you one question. Is it your position, sir, that you can never have -- that a government can never have a no claims clause?
MR. McLEAN: Yes. Under this statute because of the policy of the statute. [Transcript, at p. 27]
[101] While it is true that the Act favours “the integrity of the tendering process”, it nowhere prohibits the parties from negotiating a “no claims” clause as part of their commercial agreement, and cannot plausibly be interpreted to have that effect.
[102] In the ordinary world of commerce, as Dickson C.J. commented in Hunter, “clauses limiting or excluding liability are negotiated as part of the general contract. As they do with all other contractual terms, the parties bargain for the consequences of deficient performance” (p. 461). Moreover, as Mr. Hall points out, “[t]here are many valid reasons for contracting parties to use exemption clauses, most notably to allocate risks” (G. R. Hall, Canadian Contractual Interpretation Law (2007), at p. 243). Tercon, for example, is a sophisticated and experienced contractor and if it decided that it was in its commercial interest to proceed with the bid despite the exclusion of compensation clause, that was its prerogative and nothing in the “policy of the Act” barred the parties’ agreement on that point.
[103] To the extent Tercon is now saying that as a matter of fact the Minister, in approving the RFP, did not specifically approve the exclusion clause, and that the contract was thus somehow ultra vires the Ministry, this is not an issue that was either pleaded or dealt with in the courts below. The details of the ministerial approval process were not developed in the evidence. It is not at all evident that s. 4 required the Minister to approve the actual terms of the RFP. It is an administrative law point that Tercon, if so advised, ought to have pursued at pre-trial discovery and in the trial evidence. We have not been directed to any exploration of the matter in the testimony and it is too late in the proceeding for Tercon to explore it now. Accordingly, I proceed on the basis that the exclusion clause did not run afoul of the statutory requirements.
B. The Doctrine of the Fundamental Breach
[104] The trial judge considered the applicability of the doctrine of fundamental breach. Tercon argued that the Ministry, by reason of its fundamental breach, had forfeited the protection of the exclusion of compensation clause.
[105] The leading case is Hunter which also dealt with an exclusion of liability clause. The appellants Hunter Engineering and Allis-Chalmers Canada Ltd. supplied gearboxes used to drive conveyor belts at Syncrude’s tar sands operations in Northern Alberta. The gearboxes proved to be defective. At issue was a broad exclusion of warranty clause that limited time for suit and the level of recovery available against Allis-Chalmers (i.e. no recovery beyond the unit price of the defective products). Dickson C.J. observed: “In the face of the contractual provisions, Allis-Chalmers can only be found liable under the doctrine of fundamental breach” (p. 451).
[106] This doctrine was largely the creation of Lord Denning in the 1950s (see, e.g., Karsales (Harrow) Ltd. v. Wallis, [1956] 1 W.L.R. 936 (C.A.)). It was said to be a rule of law that operated independently of the intention of the parties in circumstances where the defendant had so egregiously breached the contract as to deny the plaintiff substantially the whole of its benefit. In such a case, according to the doctrine, the innocent party was excused from further performance but the defendant could still be held liable for the consequences of its “fundamental” breach even if the parties had excluded liability by clear and express language. See generally S. M. Waddams, The Law of Contracts (5th ed. 2005), at para. 478; J. D. McCamus, The Law of Contracts (2005), at pp. 765 et seq.
[107] The five-judge Hunter Court was unanimous in the result and gave effect to the exclusion clause at issue. Dickson C.J. and Wilson J. both emphasized that there is nothing inherently unreasonable about exclusion clauses and that they should be applied unless there is a compelling reason not to give effect to the words selected by the parties. At that point, there was some divergence of opinion.
[108] Dickson C.J. (La Forest J. concurring) observed that the doctrine of fundamental breach had “spawned a host of difficulties” (p. 460), the most obvious being the difficulty in determining whether a particular breach is fundamental. The doctrine obliged the parties to engage in “games of characterization” (p. 460) which distracted from the real question of what agreement the parties themselves intended. Accordingly, in his view, the doctrine should be “laid to rest”. The situations in which the doctrine is invoked could be addressed more directly and effectively through the doctrine of “unconscionability”, as assessed at the time the contract was made:
It is preferable to interpret the terms of the contract, in an attempt to determine exactly what the parties agreed. If on its true construction the contract excludes liability for the kind of breach that occurred, the party in breach will generally be saved from liability. Only where the contract is unconscionable, as might arise from situations of unequal bargaining power between the parties, should the courts interfere with agreements the parties have freely concluded. [p. 462]
Dickson C.J. explained that “[t]he courts do not blindly enforce harsh or unconscionable bargains” (p. 462), but “there is much to be gained by addressing directly the protection of the weak from over-reaching by the strong, rather than relying on the artificial legal doctrine of ‘fundamental breach’” (p. 462). To enforce an exclusion clause in such circumstances could tarnish the institutional integrity of the court. In that respect, it would be contrary to public policy. However, a valid exclusion clause would be enforced according to its terms.
[109] Wilson J. (L’Heureux-Dubé J. concurring) disagreed. In her view, the courts retain some residual discretion to refuse to enforce exclusion clauses in cases of fundamental breach where the doctrine of pre-breach unconscionability (favoured by Dickson C.J.) did not apply. Importantly, she rejected the imposition of a general standard of reasonableness in the judicial scrutiny of exclusion clauses, affirming that “the courts . . . are quite unsuited to assess the fairness or reasonableness of contractual provisions as the parties negotiated them” (p. 508). Wilson J. considered it more desirable to develop through the common law a post-breach analysis seeking a “balance between the obvious desirability of allowing the parties to make their own bargains . . . and the obvious undesirability of having the courts used to enforce bargains in favour of parties who are totally repudiating such bargains themselves” (p. 510).
[110] Wilson J. contemplated a two-stage test, in which the threshold step is the identification of a fundamental breach where “the foundation of the contract has been undermined, where the very thing bargained for has not been provided” (p. 500). Having found a fundamental breach to exist, the exclusion clause would not automatically be set aside, but the court should go on to assess whether, having regard to the circumstances of the breach, the party in fundamental breach should escape liability:
Exclusion clauses do not automatically lose their validity in the event of a fundamental breach by virtue of some hard and fast rule of law. They should be given their natural and true construction so that the meaning and effect of the exclusion clause the parties agreed to at the time the contract was entered into is fully understood and appreciated. But, in my view, the court must still decide, having ascertained the parties’ intention at the time the contract was made, whether or not to give effect to it in the context of subsequent events such as a fundamental breach committed by the party seeking its enforcement through the courts. . . . [T]he question essentially is: in the circumstances that have happened should the court lend its aid to A to hold B to this clause? [Emphasis added; pp. 510-11.]
[111] Wilson J. reiterated that “as a general rule” courts should give effect to exclusion clauses even in the case of fundamental breach (p. 515). Nevertheless, a residual discretion to withhold enforcement exists:
Lord Wilberforce [in Photo Production Ltd. v. Securicor Transport Ltd., [1980] A.C. 827 (H.L.)] may be right that parties of equal bargaining power should be left to live with their bargains regardless of subsequent events. I believe, however, that there is some virtue in a residual power residing in the court to withhold its assistance on policy grounds in appropriate circumstances. [Emphasis added; p. 517.]
Wilson J. made it clear that such circumstances of disentitlement would be rare. She acknowledged that an exclusion clause might well be accepted with open eyes by a party “very anxious to get” the contract (p. 509). However, Wilson J. did not elaborate further on what such circumstances might be because she found in Hunter itself that no reason existed to refuse the defendant Allis-Chalmers the benefit of the exclusion clause.
[112] The fifth judge, McIntyre J., in a crisp two-paragraph judgment, agreed with the conclusion of Wilson J. in respect of the exclusion clause issue but found it “unnecessary to deal further with the concept of fundamental breach in this case” (p. 481).
[113] The law was left in this seemingly bifurcated state until Guarantee Co. of North America v. Gordon Capital Corp., [1999] 3 S.C.R. 423. In that case, the Court breathed some life into the dying doctrine of fundamental breach while nevertheless affirming (once again) that whether or not a “fundamental breach prevents the breaching party from continuing to rely on an exclusion clause is a matter of construction rather than a rule of law” (para. 52). In other words, the question was whether the parties intended at the time of contract formation that the exclusion or limitation clause would apply “in circumstances of contractual breach, whether fundamental or otherwise” (para. 63). The Court thus emphasized that what was important was not the label (“fundamental or otherwise”) but the intent of the contracting parties when they made their bargain. “The only limitation placed upon enforcing the contract as written in the event of a fundamental breach”, the Court in Guarantee Co. continued,
would be to refuse to enforce an exclusion of liability in circumstances where to do so would be unconscionable, according to Dickson C.J., or [note the disjunctive “or”] unfair, unreasonable or otherwise contrary to public policy, according to Wilson J. [Emphasis added; para. 52.]
(See also para. 64.)
What has given rise to some concern is not the reference to “public policy”, whose role in the enforcement of contracts has never been doubted, but to the more general ideas of “unfair” and “unreasonable”, which seemingly confer on courts a very broad after-the-fact discretion.
[114] The Court’s subsequent observations in ABB Inc. v. Domtar Inc., 2007 SCC 50, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 461, should be seen in that light. Domtar was a products liability case arising under the civil law of Quebec, but the Court observed with respect to the common law:
Once the existence of a fundamental breach has been established, the court must still analyse the limitation of liability clause in light of the general rules of contract interpretation. If the words can reasonably be interpreted in only one way, it will not be open to the court, even on grounds of equity or reasonableness, to declare the clause to be unenforceable since this would amount to rewriting the contract negotiated by the parties. [Emphasis added; para. 84.]
While the Domtar Court continued to refer to “fundamental breach”, it notably repudiated any judicial discretion to depart from the terms of a valid contact upon vague notions of “equity or reasonableness”. It did not, however, express any doubt about the residual category mentioned in Guarantee Co., namely a refusal to enforce an exclusion clause on the grounds of public policy.
[115] I agree with Professor Waddams when he writes:
[I]t is surely inevitable that a court must reserve the ultimate power to decide when the values favouring enforceability are outweighed by values that society holds to be more important. [para. 557]
[116] While memorably described as an unruly horse, public policy is nevertheless fundamental to contract law, both to contractual formation and enforcement and (occasionally) to the court’s relief against enforcement. As Duff C.J. observed:
It is the duty of the courts to give effect to contracts and testamentary dispositions according to the settled rules and principles of law, since we are under a reign of law; but there are cases in which rules of law cannot have their normal operation because the law itself recognizes some paramount consideration of public policy which over-rides the interest and what otherwise would be the rights and powers of the individual.
(Re Millar Estate, [1938] S.C.R. 1, at p. 4)
See generally B. Kain and D. T. Yoshida, “The Doctrine of Public Policy in Canadian Contract Law”, in T. L. Archibald and R. S. Echlin, eds., Annual Review of Civil Litigation, 2007 (2007), 1.
[117] As Duff C.J. recognized, freedom of contract will often, but not always, trump other societal values. The residual power of a court to decline enforcement exists but, in the interest of certainty and stability of contractual relations, it will rarely be exercised. Duff C.J. adopted the view that public policy “should be invoked only in clear cases, in which the harm to the public is substantially incontestable, and does not depend upon the idiosyncratic inferences of a few judicial minds” (p. 7). While he was referring to public policy considerations pertaining to the nature of the entire contract, I accept that there may be well-accepted public policy considerations that relate directly to the nature of the breach, and thus trigger the court’s narrow jurisdiction to give relief against an exclusion clause.
[118] There are cases where the exercise of what Professor Waddams calls the “ultimate power” to refuse to enforce a contract may be justified, even in the commercial context. Freedom of contract, like any freedom, may be abused. Take the case of the milk supplier who adulterates its baby formula with a toxic compound to increase its profitability at the cost of sick or dead babies. In China, such people were shot. In Canada, should the courts give effect to a contractual clause excluding civil liability in such a situation? I do not think so. Then there are the people, also fortunately resident elsewhere, who recklessly sold toxic cooking oil to unsuspecting consumers, creating a public health crisis of enormous magnitude. Should the courts enforce an exclusion clause to eliminate contractual liability for the resulting losses in such circumstances? The answer is no, but the contract breaker’s conduct need not rise to the level of criminality or fraud to justify a finding of abuse.
[119] A less extreme example in the commercial context is Plas-Tex Canada Ltd. v. Dow Chemical of Canada Ltd., 2004 ABCA 309, 245 D.L.R. (4th) 650. The Alberta Court of Appeal refused to enforce an exclusion clause where the defendant Dow knowingly supplied defective plastic resin to a customer who used it to fabricate natural gas pipelines. Instead of disclosing its prior knowledge of the defect to the buyer, Dow chose to try to protect itself by relying upon limitation of liability clauses in its sales contracts. After some years, the pipelines began to degrade, with considerable damage to property and risk to human health from leaks and explosions. The court concluded that “a party to a contract will not be permitted to engage in unconscionable conduct secure in the knowledge that no liability can be imposed upon it because of an exclusionary clause” (para. 53). (See also McCamus, at p. 774, and Hall, at p. 243.) What was demonstrated in Plas-Tex was that the defendant Dow was so contemptuous of its contractual obligation and reckless as to the consequences of the breach as to forfeit the assistance of the court. The public policy that favours freedom of contract was outweighed by the public policy that seeks to curb its abuse.
[120] Conduct approaching serious criminality or egregious fraud are but examples of well-accepted and “substantially incontestable” considerations of public policy that may override the countervailing public policy that favours freedom of contract. Where this type of misconduct is reflected in the breach of contract, all of the circumstances should be examined very carefully by the court. Such misconduct may disable the defendant from hiding behind the exclusion clause. But a plaintiff who seeks to avoid the effect of an exclusion clause must identify the overriding public policy that it says outweighs the public interest in the enforcement of the contract. In the present case, for the reasons discussed below, I do not believe Tercon has identified a relevant public policy that fulfills this requirement.
[121] The present state of the law, in summary, requires a series of enquiries to be addressed when a plaintiff seeks to escape the effect of an exclusion clause or other contractual terms to which it had previously agreed.
[122] The first issue, of course, is whether as a matter of interpretation the exclusion clause even applies to the circumstances established in evidence. This will depend on the Court’s assessment of the intention of the parties as expressed in the contract. If the exclusion clause does not apply, there is obviously no need to proceed further with this analysis. If the exclusion clause applies, the second issue is whether the exclusion clause was unconscionable at the time the contract was made, “as might arise from situations of unequal bargaining power between the parties” (Hunter, at p. 462). This second issue has to do with contract formation, not breach.
[123] If the exclusion clause is held to be valid and applicable, the Court may undertake a third enquiry, namely whether the Court should nevertheless refuse to enforce the valid exclusion clause because of the existence of an overriding public policy, proof of which lies on the party seeking to avoid enforcement of the clause, that outweighs the very strong public interest in the enforcement of contracts.
IV. Application to the Facts of This Case
[124] I proceed to deal with the issues in the sequence mentioned above.
A. Did the Ministry Breach Contract A?
[125] The trial judge found that the parties intended to create contractual relations at the bidding stage (i.e. Contract A): 2006 BCSC 499, 53 B.C.L.R. (4th) 138, at para. 88. I agree with that conclusion. If there were no intent to form Contract A, there would be no need to exclude liability for compensation in the event of its breach.
[126] The Ministry argued that Contract A was not breached. It was entitled to enter into Contract B with Brentwood and it did so. There was no privity between the Ministry and EAC. The Ministry would have had no direct claim against EAC in the event of deficient performance. I accept as correct that Brentwood, having obtained Contract B, was in a position of considerable flexibility as to how and with whom it carried out the work. Nevertheless, it was open to the trial judge to conclude, as she did, that the RFP process was not conducted by the Ministry with the degree of fairness and transparency that the terms of Contract A entitled Tercon to expect. At the end of an unfair process, she found, Contract B was not awarded to Brentwood (the eligible bidder) but to what amounted to a joint venture consisting of Brentwood and EAC. I therefore proceed with the rest of the analysis on the basis that Contract A was breached.
B. What Is the Proper Interpretation of the Exclusion of Compensation Clause and Did the Ministry’s Conduct Fall Within Its Terms?
[127] It is at this stage that I part company with my colleague Cromwell J. The exclusion clause is contained in the RFP and provides as follows:
2.10 . . .
Except as expressly and specifically permitted in these Instructions to Proponents, no Proponent shall have any claim for compensation of any kind whatsoever, as a result of participating in this RFP, and by submitting a Proposal each Proponent shall be deemed to have agreed that it has no claim.
In my view, “participating in this RFP” began with “submitting a Proposal” for consideration. The RFP process consisted of more than the final selection of the winning bid and Tercon participated in it. Tercon’s bid was considered. To deny that such participation occurred on the ground that in the end the Ministry chose a Brentwood joint venture (ineligible) instead of Brentwood itself (eligible) would, I believe, take the Court up the dead end identified by Wilson J. in Hunter:
. . . exclusion clauses, like all contractual provisions, should be given their natural and true construction. Great uncertainty and needless complications in the drafting of contracts will obviously result if courts give exclusion clauses strained and artificial interpretations in order, indirectly and obliquely, to avoid the impact of what seems to them ex post facto to have been an unfair and unreasonable clause. [p. 509]
Professor McCamus expresses a similar thought:
. . . the law concerning exculpatory clauses is likely to be more rather than less predictable if the underlying concern is openly recognized, as it is in Hunter, rather than suppressed and achieved indirectly through the subterfuge of strained interpretation of such terms. [p. 778]
[128] I accept the trial judge’s view that the Ministry was at fault in its performance of the RFP, but the conclusion that the process thereby ceased to be the RFP process appears to me, with due respect to colleagues of a different view, to be a “strained and artificial interpretatio[n] in order, indirectly and obliquely, to avoid the impact of what seems to them ex post facto to have been an unfair and unreasonable clause”.
[129] As a matter of interpretation, I agree with Donald J.A. speaking for the unanimous court below:
The [trial] judge said the word “participating” was ambiguous. With deference, I do not find it so. The sense it conveys is the contractor’s involvement in the RFP/contract A stage of the process. I fail to see how “participating” could bear any other meaning. [Emphasis added; para. 16.]
Accordingly, I conclude that on the face of it, the exclusion clause applies to the facts described in the evidence before us.
C. Was the Claim Excluding Compensation Unconscionable at the Time Contract A Was Made?
[130] At this point, the focus turns to contract formation. Tercon advances two arguments: firstly, that it suffered from an inequality of bargaining power and secondly, (as mentioned) that the exclusion clause violates public policy as reflected in the Transportation Act.
(1) Unequal Bargaining Power
[131] In Hunter, Dickson C.J. stated, at p. 462: “Only where the contract is unconscionable, as might arise from situations of unequal bargaining power between the parties, should the courts interfere with agreements the parties have freely concluded.” Applying that test to the case before him, he concluded:
I have no doubt that unconscionability is not an issue in this case. Both Allis-Chalmers and Syncrude are large and commercially sophisticated companies. Both parties knew or should have known what they were doing and what they had bargained for when they entered into the contract. [p. 464]
While Tercon is not on the same level of power and authority as the Ministry, Tercon is a major contractor and is well able to look after itself in a commercial context. It need not bid if it doesn’t like what is proposed. There was no relevant imbalance in bargaining power.
(2) Policy of the Transportation Act
[132] As mentioned earlier, Tercon cites and relies upon the policy of the Act which undoubtedly favours the transparency and integrity of the bidding process. I have already discussed my reasons for rejecting Tercon’s argument that this “policy” operates as a bar to the ability of the parties to agree on such commonplace commercial terms as in the circumstances they think appropriate. In addition, the exclusion clause is not as draconian as Tercon portrays it. Other remedies for breach of Contract A (specific performance or injunctive relief, for example) were available.
[133] In this case, injunction relief was in fact a live possibility. Although Tercon was not briefed on the negotiations with other bidders, the trial judge found that Glenn Walsh, the owner of Tercon, “had seen representatives of EAC with Brentwood following [the Brentwood/EAC interviews with the Ministry and Bill Swain of Brentwood]”, and when asked whether Tercon was going to sue, Walsh had said “no” without further comment. Had Tercon pushed for more information and sought an injunction (as a matter of private law, not public law), at that stage the exclusion clause would have had no application, but Tercon did not do so. This is not to say that estoppel or waiver applies. Nor is it to say that injunctive relief would be readily available in many bidding situations (although if an injunction had been sought here, the unavailability of the alternative remedy of monetary damages might have assisted Tercon). It is merely to say that the exclusion clause is partial, not exhaustive.
[134] The Kincolith road project presented a serious construction challenge on a tight time frame and within a tight budget. Contract A did not involve a bid for a fixed price contract but for the right to negotiate the bid details once the winning proponent was selected. In such a fluid situation, all participants could expect difficulties in the contracting process. Members of the construction bar are nothing if not litigious. In the circumstances, the bidders might reasonably have accepted (however reluctantly) the Ministry’s need for a bidding process that excluded compensation, and adjusted their bids accordingly. The taxpayers of British Columbia were not prepared to pay the contractor’s profit twice over — once to Brentwood/EAC for actually building the road, and now to Tercon, even though in Tercon’s case the “profit” would be gained without Tercon running the risks associated with the performance of Contract B. The Court should not be quick to declare such a clause, negotiated between savvy participants in the construction business, to be “contrary to the Act”.
D. Assuming the Validity of the Exclusion Clause at the Time the Contract Was Made, Is There Any Overriding Public Policy That Would Justify the Court’s Refusal to Enforce It?
[135] If the exclusion clause is not invalid from the outset, I do not believe the Ministry’s performance can be characterized as so aberrant as to forfeit the protection of the contractual exclusion clause on the basis of some overriding public policy. While there is a public interest in a fair and transparent tendering process, it cannot be ratcheted up to defeat the enforcement of Contract A in this case. There was an RFP process and Tercon participated in it.
[136] Assertions of ineligible bidders and ineligible bids are the bread and butter of construction litigation. If a claim to defeat the exclusion clause succeeds here on the basis that the owner selected a joint venture consisting of an eligible bidder with an ineligible bidder, so also by a parity of reasoning should an exclusion clause be set aside if the owner accepted a bid ineligible on other grounds. There would be little room left for the exclusion clause to operate. A more sensible and realistic view is that the parties here expected, even if they didn’t like it, that the exclusion of compensation clause would operate even where the eligibility criteria in respect of the bid (including the bidder) were not complied with.
[137] While the Ministry’s conduct was in breach of Contract A, that conduct was not so extreme as to engage some overriding and paramount public interest in curbing contractual abuse as in the Plas-Tex case. Brentwood was not an outsider to the RFP process. It was a legitimate competitor. All bidders knew that the road contract (i.e. Contract B) would not be performed by the proponent alone. The work required a large “team” of different trades and personnel to perform. The issue was whether EAC would be on the job as a major sub-contractor (to which Tercon could not have objected) or identified with Brentwood as a joint venture “proponent” with EAC. All bidders were made aware of a certain flexibility with respect to the composition of any proponent’s “team”. Section 2.8(b) of the RFP provided that if “a material change has occurred to the Proponent since its qualification under the RFEI, including if the composition of the Proponent’s team members has changed, . . . the Ministry may request [further information and] . . . reserves the right to disqualify that Proponent, and reject its Proposal”. Equally, “[i]f a qualified Proponent is concerned that it has undergone a material change, the Proponent can, at its election, make a preliminary submission to the Ministry, in advance of the Closing Date, and before submitting a Proposal. . . . The Ministry will, within three working days of receipt of the preliminary submission give a written decision as to whether the Proponent is still qualified to submit a Proposal.”
[138] The RFP issued on January 15, 2001. The Ministry was informed by Brentwood of a “proposed material change to our team’s structure” in respect of a joint venture with EAC by fax dated January 24, 2001. From the Ministry’s perspective, the change was desirable. EAC was a bigger company, had greater expertise in rock drilling and blasting (a major part of the contract) and a stronger balance sheet. EAC was identified in Brentwood’s amended proposal as a sub-contractor. In the end, the Ministry did not approve the January 14, 2001 request, presumably because it doubted that a change in the “composition of the Proponent’s team’s members” could , according to the terms of the RFP, include a change in the Proponent itself.
[139] The Ministry did obtain legal advice and did not proceed in defiance of it. On March 29, 2001, the Ministry noted in an internal e-mail that a Ministry lawyer (identified in the e-mail) had come to the conclusion that the joint venture was not an eligible proponent but advised that Contract B could lawfully be structured in a way so as to satisfy both Brentwood/EAC’s concerns and avoid litigation from disappointed proponents.
[140] I do not wish to understate the difference between EAC as a sub-contractor and EAC as a joint-venturer. Nor do I discount the trial judge’s condemnation of the Ministry’s lack of fairness and transparency in making a Contract B which on its face was at odds with what the trial judge found to be the true state of affairs. Tercon has legitimate reason to complain about the Ministry’s conduct. I say only that based on the jurisprudence, the Ministry’s misconduct did not rise to the level where public policy would justify the court in depriving the Ministry of the protection of the exclusion of compensation clause freely agreed to by Tercon in the contract.
[141] The construction industry in British Columbia is run by knowledgeable and sophisticated people who bid upon and enter government contracts with eyes wide open. No statute in British Columbia and no principle of the common law override their ability in this case to agree on a tendering process including a limitation or exclusion of remedies for breach of its rules. A contractor who does not think it is in its business interest to bid on the terms offered is free to decline to participate. As Donald J.A. pointed out, if enough contractors refuse to participate, the Ministry would be forced to change its approach. So long as contractors are willing to bid on such terms, I do not think it is the court’s job to rescue them from the consequences of their decision to do so. Tercon’s loss of anticipated profit is a paper loss. In my view, its claim is barred by the terms of the contract it agreed to.
V. Disposition
[142] I would dismiss the appeal without costs.
Appeal allowed, McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, Abella and Rothstein JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: McLean & Armstrong, West Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent: Attorney General of British Columbia, Victoria.
Solicitor for the intervener: Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.