KP Pacific Holdings Ltd. v. Guardian Insurance Co. of
Canada, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 433, 2003 SCC 25
KP Pacific Holdings Ltd. Appellant
v.
Guardian Insurance Company of Canada, Canadian Northern
Shield Insurance Company, AXA Pacific Insurance, General
Accident Insurance Company of Canada and Sovereign
General Insurance Co. Respondents
Indexed as: KP Pacific Holdings Ltd. v. Guardian Insurance Co. of Canada
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC 25.
File No.: 28815.
2003: February 18; 2003: May 1.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour, LeBel and Deschamps JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Insurance — All‑risks policy — Limitation
period — Insured claiming for fire damage under all‑risks policy — Part 5
(Fire Provisions) of British Columbia Insurance Act providing shorter
limitation period than Part 2 (General Provisions) — Which part of Insurance
Act, and by extension, which limitation period applicable? — Insurance Act,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 226, Part 2, Part 5, s. 119.
The insured claimed for loss by fire under its all‑risks
insurance policy. The claim was made more than one year after the loss occurred
but within one year of filing proof of loss. The insurer took the
position that the claim could not proceed on the ground that the applicable
limitation period is one year from the date of the loss, according to
Part 5 — the Fire Insurance Part — of the B.C. Insurance Act. At
trial, the insured contended that its all‑risks policy fell instead under
the general provisions of Part 2, where the limitation period is one year
from filing proof of loss. The trial judge held that the policy fell
within Part 5 of the Act and dismissed the insured’s claim. The Court of
Appeal upheld the judgment.
Held: The
appeal should be allowed. The limitation period in Part 2 is applicable
and the insured’s claim is not statute‑barred.
Neither the language of s. 119 in Part 5 nor
the history of that provision supported the conclusion that the Legislature
intended a multi‑risk policy to fall within Part 5. Such policies
cannot be shoehorned into that Part without contrived reconstruction and
anomalous consequences. Section 119, despite its alterations, is
based on the outmoded paradigm of discrete categories of insurance policies and
is incapable of coherently addressing the modern multi‑peril policy.
Since the insured’s policy does not fit into a specific category, it is
governed by Part 2. Part 2, however, does not represent an ideal
solution for multi‑risk comprehensive policies and it would be highly
salutary for the Legislature to amend the Act and to provide specifically for
such policies. The fact that the contract of insurance specifies a
limitation period of one year from loss did not oust the longer limitation
period in Part 2 because s. 3(a) of the Act does not permit the
insurer to substitute contractually harsher terms than those provided in
Part 2.
Cases Cited
Referred to: Dressew Supply Ltd. v. Laurentian Pacific Insurance
Co. (1991), 57 B.C.L.R. (2d) 198; Churchland v. Gore Mutual Insurance
Co. (2001), 92 B.C.L.R. (3d) 1, 2001 BCCA 470.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Insurance Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 226,
ss. 3(a), 119, statutory condition 14.
Insurance Act, S.B.C. 1925, c. 20,
s. 2 “fire insurance”.
Insurance Act Amendment Act, 1935,
S.B.C. 1935, c. 38, s. 2 “fire insurance”.
Insurance Act Amendment Act, 1938,
S.B.C. 1938, c. 24, s. 3.
Insurance Act Amendment Act, 1957,
S.B.C. 1957, c. 31, s. 7.
Insurance Classes Regulation, B.C. Reg.
337/90, s. 2 “fire insurance”.
Authors Cited
Brown, Craig, and Julio
Menezes. Insurance Law in Canada, 2nd ed. Scarborough,
Ont.: Carswell, 1991.
Rendall, James A. Annotation to Briggs
v. B.C.A.A. Insurance Co. (1990), 40 C.C.L.I. 282.
Rendall, James A. “Case
Comment: Dressew Supply Ltd. v. Laurentian Pacific Insurance Co.: A
Revisitation” (1995), 28 C.C.L.I. (2d) 220.
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court
of Appeal (2001), 202 D.L.R. (4th) 235, 92 B.C.L.R. (3d) 26, 156 B.C.A.C. 58,
[2001] I.L.R. ¶I‑4009, [2001] B.C.J. No. 1517 (QL), 2001 BCCA 469,
supplementary reasons (2002), 210 D.L.R. (4th) 562, 99 B.C.L.R. (3d) 195, 165
B.C.A.C. 247, [2002] B.C.J. No. 509 (QL), 2002 BCCA 176, affirming a
decision of the British Columbia Supreme Court (2000), 18 C.C.L.I. (3d) 196,
[2000] I.L.R. ¶I‑3839, [2000] B.C.J. No. 833 (QL), 2000 BCSC 673.
Appeal allowed.
Michael G. Armstrong and Janet E. Currie, for the appellant.
Donald W. Yule, Q.C., and Alex Sayn‑Wittgenstein, for the
respondents.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
The Chief Justice —
I. Introduction
1
The appellant owned a hotel. On June 6, 1997, the hotel was damaged by
fire. The appellant made a claim for the loss under its insurance policy. The
insurer took the position that the claim had not been brought within the
applicable limitation period. The British Columbia Supreme Court dismissed the
appellant’s action: (2000), 18 C.C.L.I. (3d) 196, 2000 BCSC 673. The Court of
Appeal upheld this decision: (2001), 92 B.C.L.R. (3d) 26, 2001 BCCA 469,
supplementary reasons (2002), 99 B.C.L.R. (3d) 195, 2002 BCCA 176. The
litigants now find themselves seeking final resolution before the Supreme Court
of Canada.
2
The source of all the confusion, and the consequent delay and expense,
is the British Columbia Insurance Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 226. It is
unclear. The insurer argues that the applicable limitation period is one year
from the date of the loss, according to statutory condition 14 of Part 5, the
Fire Insurance Part. The insured, by contrast, argues that this all-risks
policy does not fit under Part 5, and falls instead under the general
provisions of Part 2, where the limitation period is one year from filing proof
of loss. On the first reading, the appellant’s claim is out of time. On the
second, it may proceed.
3
The Insurance Act was passed in 1925 (S.B.C. 1925, c. 20).
Despite repeated housekeeping amendments, it remains essentially unchanged. It
was designed for a world where insurers issued policies geared to specific
risks and subjects, such as fire insurance, theft insurance, business loss
insurance, and so on. Accordingly, it lays down rules, including limitation
periods, based on different and discrete categories of insurance.
4
Insurance practices, by contrast, have changed. A dominant policy in
today’s world is the “all-risks” or “multi-peril” policy, which covers a
panoply of perils. This is good for consumers. It minimizes the number of
policies they need to buy and ensures comprehensive coverage at lower cost.
But it is bad when legal issues arise. The outmoded category-based Act
contains rules based on the old classes of insurance. The newer comprehensive
policies are difficult if not impossible to fit into the old categories. The
result is continued uncertainty about what rules apply. Claims stall.
Litigation ensues. Courts struggle with tortuous alternative interpretations.
The rulings that have emerged have been likened to a “judicial lottery”:
Professor J. A. Rendall, Annotation to Briggs v. B.C.A.A. Insurance Co.
(1990), 40 C.C.L.I. 282, at p. 288 (commenting on B.C. case law prior to Dressew
Supply Ltd. v. Laurentian Pacific Insurance Co. (1991), 57 B.C.L.R. (2d)
198 (C.A.)).
5
It would be highly salutary for the Legislature to revisit these
provisions and indicate its intent with respect to all-risks and multi-peril
policies. In the meantime, the task of resolving disputes arising from this
disjunction between insurance law and practice falls to the courts. Brown and
Menezes lament: “Surely there can be little which is less productive, or more
wasteful, than litigation about such technicalities”: C. Brown and J. Menezes, Insurance
Law in Canada (2nd ed. 1991), at p. 16. I whole-heartedly agree.
6
The comprehensive policy at issue on this appeal cannot be shoehorned
into the Part 5 fire insurance section without contrived reconstruction and
anomalous consequences. It simply does not fit. Consequently, it cannot be
said that the Legislature intended the Fire Insurance provisions to govern. It
follows that comprehensive policies are governed by Part 2, which is of general
application. Accordingly, we conclude that the limitation period of one year
from filing proof of loss applies, and that the appellant’s claim is not
statute-barred.
II. Analysis
7
The result in this case depends on whether KP Pacific’s policy falls
within Part 5 of the Insurance Act, governing fire insurance, or within
Part 2, the general part. If the policy falls within Part 5, the appellant is
out of time. If not, it may pursue its claim. Which Part applies depends on
how one reads the Act. To attempt to understand the Act’s provisions, one must
trace its history.
8
In 1925 British Columbia consolidated a number of laws into the Insurance
Act. The Act defined fire insurance simply as “insurance against loss of
or damage to property in the Province, or in transit therefrom or thereto,
caused by fire, lightning, or explosion, [including] sprinkler-leakage
insurance”: Insurance Act, S.B.C. 1925, c. 20, s. 2. In 1935 the
definition was amended to add the qualification that the fire insurance must
not be “incidental to some other class of insurance defined by or under this
Act”: Insurance Act Amendment Act, 1935, S.B.C. 1935, c. 38, s. 2. Fire
insurance was seen as a discrete class of insurance, dealing exclusively or
primarily with loss due to fire. The Fire Insurance Part of the Act
accordingly seemed to be confined to strict fire insurance policies.
9
In 1938 the Act was amended to include the possibility that the
Fire Insurance Part of the Act could apply to fire insurance policies that also
included other risks. This provision, still found in s. 119 of the Act,
provides that “[t]his Part applies to insurers carrying on the business of fire
insurance and to contracts of fire insurance, whether or not a contract
includes insurance against other risks as well as the risks included in the
expression ‘fire insurance as defined by this Act’”: Insurance Act
Amendment Act, 1938, S.B.C. 1938, c. 24, s. 3 (emphasis added). No other province adopted this particular language. Why British
Columbia made this change is unclear. Perhaps it was designed to reflect the
fact that fire insurance policies also might cover incidental risks, such as
water damage from fire. It seems unlikely that the reason for the amendment
was to respond to the multi-peril policy, which was not yet prevalent.
10
In 1957, in concert with other provinces, the Legislature amended the
Act to exclude certain contracts of insurance from the Fire Insurance Part,
Part 5, namely contracts of theft insurance (now s. 119(a)), loss of profits
insurance (now s. 119(b)), and policies “[w]here the peril of fire is an
incidental peril to the coverage provided” (now s. 119(c)): Insurance Act
Amendment Act, 1957, S.B.C. 1957, c. 31, s. 7. Updated by further
exclusions, the present s. 119 reads as follows:
This Part applies to insurers carrying on the business of fire
insurance and to contracts of fire insurance, whether or not a contract
includes insurance against other risks as well as the risks included in the
expression “fire insurance” as defined by this Act, except
(a) contracts of insurance falling within the
classes of aircraft, automobile, boiler and machinery, inland transportation,
marine, plate glass, sprinkler leakage and theft insurance,
(b) if the subject matter of
the contract of insurance is rents, charges or loss of profits,
(c) if the peril of fire is an
incidental peril to the coverage provided, or
(d) if the subject matter of
the insurance is property that is insured by an insurer or a group of insurers
primarily as a nuclear risk under a policy covering against loss of or damage
to the property resulting from nuclear reaction or nuclear radiation and from
other perils.
11
Section 119 maintains a classification approach to the applicability of
Part 5. Fire insurance is defined by reference to the regulations, now
Regulation 337: Insurance Classes Regulation, B.C. Reg. 337/90, s. 2.
The 1938 clause introduces the idea that the Part may apply where the policy
insures other risks, suggesting that an all-risks policy might fall within this
Part. However, the exceptions that follow in s. 119(a) all refer to classes of
insurance or incidents of those classes as defined in Regulation 337. The
result is a section that defines the contents of Part 5 on the basis of a
definition of fire insurance as a narrow discrete class, tantalizingly
amplifies it to include other risks, and then ratchets it back by a series of
class-based exclusions.
12
How, if at all, does an all-risks policy penetrate the tangled
historical thicket that guards entry to Part 5? It does not enter through the
initial definition of fire insurance in Regulation 337, which says that “‘fire
insurance’ means insurance against loss of or damage to the property insured
caused by fire, lightning, smoke or explosion due to ignition, and includes
sprinkler leakage insurance”. The only point of entry for an all-risks policy
is the 1938 clause, not found in any other province’s legislation, that says
Part 5 applies “whether or not a contract includes insurance against other
risks as well as the risks included in” the definition of fire insurance. As
noted above, it seems unlikely this phrase was intended to embrace modern
multi-peril policies. However, even if the phrase is thus extended, it fits
ill with s. 119’s class-based structure, as becomes apparent when we come to
the specific exclusions. The question is simple to put but difficult to
answer: If the 1938 phrase brings modern multi-peril policies into Part 5, how
much of them is then taken out by the exceptions?
13
Much ink has been spilled on the interpretation of these exceptions and
what precisely they remove from Part 5. Sadly, little certainty has emerged.
The debate reveals different levels of uncertainty. The first uncertainty is
whether one element of a policy falling within an exclusion removes the entire
policy from Part 5, or only removes the excluded element. Different courts
have answered the question differently. Before us, all parties agreed that an
approach that chops the policy up, with some elements in Part 5 and other
elements outside, is unworkable. This leaves, however, the anomaly that a
minor excluded element can propel an entire policy out of Part 5.
14
The second level of uncertainty relates to how one interprets the
exclusions in s. 119. One approach is to read them as referring to the nature
of the loss or peril that actually occurs. Thus, if the event that triggers
the claim is theft, an all-risks policy is removed from Part 5 by the operation
of s. 119(a), which excludes theft insurance. This approach seems unworkable,
since what rules govern a policy depends on one’s ex post
characterization of the triggering event. Another approach is to hold that if
the non-fire aspects of the coverage are merely incidental, the policy stays
within Part 5; if they are more dominant, the policy is removed from Part 5 and
comes under Part 2. This approach requires ranking the perils covered in an
all-risks policy to determine which are primary and which are incidental.
This, in turn, has spawned a third view: that in a multi-peril policy, all
risks covered are incidental to the coverage provided, with the result that all
multi-peril policies are propelled out of Part 5 and into Part 2: Dressew,
supra. Yet, detractors point out that this seems to change the common
meaning of the word “incidental”, which connotes a primary-secondary
distinction, and that if there is no hierarchy of perils, they should all be
considered co-equal, rather than “incidental” under s. 119(c).
15
Still other problems emerge when we try to force comprehensive policies
into s. 119. Some losses covered by comprehensive policies, such as business
losses, may be difficult to assess within the limitation period of one year
from the date of the precipitating event, in this case fire. Further confusion
arises from the fact that some of the enumerated exclusions seem to be
internally inconsistent with the general grant. For example, fire insurance is
defined in the regulations as including the risk of sprinkler leakage. Yet, s.
119(a) specifically excludes sprinkler leakage insurance from the Fire
Insurance Part. How this can be so remains a mystery.
16
None of the proposed solutions for deciding whether or not a given
multi-peril policy comes under Part 5 sits comfortably with the language of
s. 119, taken in its entirety. One is driven to conclude that s. 119,
despite its alterations, is based on the paradigm of discrete categories of
insurance policies and is incapable of coherently addressing the modern
multi-peril policy. It may have made good sense in the 1930s, when insurance
was offered in discrete packages, each containing its own special type of
coverage. It makes much less sense now.
17
The exclusions in s. 119 refer not to perils but to types of policies,
as defined by current Regulation 337. Each of the items in s. 119(a) refers to
a type of insurance defined in the Regulation. They are labeled variously,
some by the class of property they cover (aircraft, automobile, boiler and
machinery, plate glass); others by the activity involved (inland transportation,
marine); still others by the peril (sprinkler leakage, theft). They share only
this: they designate a category of insurance. Thus, s. 119(a) excludes
from Part 5 policies of insurance that are not, by custom and statutory
definition, fire insurance. Sections 119(b) and 119(d) likewise remove from
Part 5 subject classes of insurance policies. Section 119(c) acts as a
residual clause; it excludes policies not specified in (a), (b), and now (d),
where fire insurance is minor or incidental in relation to the main subject of
the policy. Viewed thus, all the parts of s. 119 work together.
18
If we still lived in a world where people took out different policies
for each of these risks, s. 119 would still function reasonably well. The
problem is that our world is quite different. Section 119 is being asked to
apply to an animal it was never designed to tame — the modern multi-peril
policy. Section 119 is built on the premise of discrete policies for discrete
subject matters, with limited overlap. It deals with overlap and intersection
by enumerated exclusions, and by the logic of what is primary and what is
incidental. It may still make good sense for certain multiple subject-matter
policies, where these are fairly limited in scope, and where the subject
matters can be readily identified and ranked. But when applied to broader
multi-risk policies, it fails.
19
I conclude that s. 119 can be applied to comprehensive policies only at
the costs of contrived reinterpretation and anomalous consequences. Whatever
interpretation one seeks to put on Part 5’s terms, however one struggles to
apply it to this policy, one ends by acknowledging inconsistency. I cannot
conclude either from the language of s. 119 or its history that the Legislature
intended a multi-risk policy such as this one to fall within Part 5 with all
the attendant consequences, including a shortened limitation period. It
follows that this policy, like any other policy that does not fit into a
specific category, is governed by Part 2, the section of general
application.
20
We come to this conclusion fully aware that the general
provisions of Part 2 may not represent an ideal solution for multi-risk
comprehensive policies. Professor Rendall has observed that “[i]t may well be
thought that Pt. 2 is a more primitive regulatory code than Pt. 6 [now Part 5],
less adequate as a scheme of regulation”: J. A. Rendall, “Case Comment: Dressew
Supply Ltd. v. Laurentian Pacific Insurance Co.: A Revisitation” (1995), 28
C.C.L.I. (2d) 220, at p. 235. On the other hand, in Churchland v. Gore
Mutual Insurance Co. (2001), 92 B.C.L.R. (3d) 1, 2001 BCCA 470, Finch J.A.
commented that Part 5, on balance, is “unfavourable to insureds” (para. 61). To repeat, it is our hope that legislators will
rectify the situation by amending the Insurance Act to provide
specifically for comprehensive policies. In an insurance era dominated by
comprehensive policies, it is imperative that Canada’s Insurance Acts
specifically and unambiguously address how these statutes are to operate and
the rules by which comprehensive policies are to be governed.
21
This leaves the insurer’s alternative argument that even if Part 2
applies, the fact that the contract of insurance specifies a limitation period
of one year from loss ousts the longer limitation period in Part 2. I cannot
accept this argument. The issue is governed by s. 3(a) of the Act, which
provides:
This Part has effect, despite any law or contract to the contrary,
except that
(a) if any section or statutory condition
contained in Part 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7 is applicable and deals with a subject matter
that is the same as or similar to any subject matter dealt with by this Part,
this Part does not apply . . . .
This provision
does not permit the insurer to substitute harsher terms than those provided in
Part 2. The plain language of the section indicates the Legislature’s intent
that the provisions in Part 2 operate as a floor of protection beneath which
insurance contracts cannot descend. If a contract falls within one of the
enumerated Parts, then that Part is engaged and provides a different floor.
Otherwise, the insured is guaranteed, at a minimum, the statutory protections
contained in Part 2. The insurer’s attempt to argue that the shorter
limitation period is more advantageous to the insured because it is more
certain verges on the disingenuous.
III. Conclusion
22
I would allow the appeal and direct that the claim proceed to trial.
The appellant shall have its costs throughout.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Armstrong & Company,
Vancouver.
Solicitors for the respondents: Guild, Yule &
Company, Vancouver.