SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Citation: Alberta (Attorney General) v. Moloney, 2015 SCC 51, [2015]
3 S.C.R. 327
|
Date: 20151113
Docket: 35820
|
Between:
Attorney
General of Alberta
Appellant
and
Joseph
William Moloney
Respondent
- and -
Attorney
General of Ontario, Attorney General of Quebec,
Attorney
General of British Columbia, Attorney General for
Saskatchewan
and Superintendent of Bankruptcy
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver,
Karakatsanis, Wagner, Gascon and Côté JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 90)
Reasons
Concurring in the Result:
(paras. 91 to 133)
|
Gascon J. (Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell,
Moldaver, Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ. concurring)
Côté J. (McLachlin C.J. concurring)
|
Alberta
(Attorney General)
v. Moloney, 2015 SCC 51, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 327
Attorney General of Alberta Appellant
v.
Joseph William Moloney Respondent
and
Attorney General of Ontario,
Attorney General of Quebec,
Attorney General of British Columbia,
Attorney General for Saskatchewan and
Superintendent of Bankruptcy Interveners
Indexed as: Alberta (Attorney
General) v. Moloney
2015 SCC 51
File No.: 35820.
2015: January 15; 2015: November 13.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell,
Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Wagner, Gascon and Côté JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for alberta
Constitutional law — Division of powers — Federal paramountcy —
Bankruptcy and insolvency — Property and civil rights — Judgment debt owed to
province constituted claim provable in debtor’s bankruptcy — Debtor obtained
absolute discharge in bankruptcy — Federal legislation governing bankruptcy
providing for debtor’s release from all claims
provable in bankruptcy upon discharge — Whether
provincial legislation providing for continuing suspension of debtor’s driver’s licence and motor vehicle permits until
payment of judgment debt constitutionally
inoperative by reason of doctrine of federal paramountcy — Test for determining
whether operational conflict exists — Whether federal and provincial legislation can operate side by side
without conflict — Whether operation of provincial law frustrates purpose of
federal law — Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. B‑3, s. 178(2) — Traffic Safety Act, R.S.A. 2000,
c. T‑6, s. 102.
M
caused a car accident while he was uninsured. The province of Alberta
compensated an individual injured in the accident and sought to recover the
amount of the compensation from M. Section 102 of Alberta’s Traffic
Safety Act (“TSA”) allows the province to suspend M’s licence and
permits until he pays the amount of the compensation. M made an assignment in
bankruptcy and was eventually discharged. He listed the province’s claim in his
Statement of Affairs. The debt was a claim provable in bankruptcy.
Section 178(2) of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (“BIA ”)
provides that, upon discharge, M is released from all debts that are claims
provable in bankruptcy. As a result of his bankruptcy and discharge, M did not
pay the amount of the compensation in full; because of this failure to pay,
Alberta suspended his vehicle permits and driver’s licence. M contested this
suspension. The Court of Queen’s Bench and the Court of Appeal found that there
was a conflict between the federal and provincial laws. Relying on the doctrine
of federal paramountcy, they declared s. 102 of the TSA to be
inoperative to the extent of the conflict.
Held:
The appeal should be dismissed. Section 102 of the TSA is
constitutionally inoperative to the extent that it is used to enforce a debt
discharged in bankruptcy.
Per
Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Wagner and Gascon JJ.:
In Canada, the federal and provincial levels of government must enact laws
within the limits of their respective spheres of jurisdiction. It is often
impossible however for one level of government to legislate effectively within
its jurisdiction without affecting matters that are within the other level’s
jurisdiction. In certain
circumstances, the powers of one level of government must be protected against
intrusions by the other level. To protect against such intrusions, the Court
has developed various constitutional doctrines, including the doctrine of
federal paramountcy. Under this doctrine, the federal law prevails when there
is a genuine inconsistency between federal and provincial legislation, that is,
when the operational effects of provincial legislation are incompatible with
federal legislation. To determine whether such a conflict exists, first and
foremost, it is necessary to ensure that the overlapping laws are independently
valid. If so, then the court must determine whether their concurrent operation
results in a conflict. In this case, the impugned provisions are independently
valid. The only question is whether their concurrent operation results in a
conflict.
A conflict will arise in one of
two situations, which form the two branches of the paramountcy test:
(1) there is an operational conflict because it is impossible to comply
with both laws, or (2) although it is possible to comply with both laws,
the operation of the provincial law frustrates the purpose of the federal enactment.
The first branch of the test has been described in the jurisprudence as actual
conflict in operation as where one enactment says “yes” and the other says
“no”. The question is whether both laws can operate side by side without
conflict or both laws can apply concurrently, and citizens can comply
with either of them without violating the other. The
assessment under this branch is not limited to the actual words or to the
literal meaning of the words of the provisions at issue. Rather, the provisions
must be read properly based on the modern approach to statutory interpretation.
If there is no conflict under the first branch of the test, one may still be
found under the second branch. The question under the second branch is whether
operation of the provincial Act is compatible with the federal legislative
purpose. The effect of the provincial law may frustrate the purpose of the
federal law, even though it does not entail a direct violation of the federal
law’s provisions.
Under the
first or the second branch of the test, the burden of proof rests on the party
alleging the conflict. In keeping with co‑operative federalism, the doctrine of paramountcy is applied with
restraint. Absent a genuine inconsistency, courts will favour an interpretation
of the federal legislation that allows the concurrent operation of both laws. A
provincial intention to interfere with the federal jurisdiction is neither
necessary nor sufficient. The focus is instead on the effect of the provincial
law. Assessing the effect of the provincial law
requires looking at the substance of the law, rather than its form. The
province cannot do indirectly what it is precluded from doing directly.
Parliament enacted the BIA
pursuant to its jurisdiction over matters of bankruptcy and insolvency. The BIA
furthers two purposes: the equitable distribution of the bankrupt’s assets
among his or her creditors and the bankrupt’s financial rehabilitation.
Equitable distribution of assets is achieved by requiring creditors wishing to
enforce a claim provable in bankruptcy participate in one collective
proceeding. Financial rehabilitation is achieved through the discharge of the
bankrupt from all claims provable in bankruptcy. From
the perspective of the creditors, the discharge means they are unable to
enforce their provable claims.
Provincial legislatures have the
power to legislate with regard to property and civil rights. This power includes traffic regulation and the authority to set
conditions for driver’s licences and vehicle permits. The TSA is a comprehensive legislative scheme
for traffic regulation. A victim injured in an accident may sue for damages. If
successful but the uninsured driver does not pay, the victim may apply to the
Administrator under the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act (“MVACA”)
for compensation in the amount of the unsatisfied judgment and the judgment is
then assigned to the Administrator. Section 102 of the TSA, which
complements the MVACA program, allows the Registrar of Motor Vehicle Services to suspend the debtor’s driver’s licence and vehicle permits until the
judgment debt is paid or periodic payments in satisfaction of the judgment are
being made. It is, in substance, a debt collection mechanism. Since the
judgment debt in this case is a claim provable in bankruptcy, the purpose and
effect of s. 102 are to suspend a debtor’s driving privileges until
payment of a provable claim.
The laws at issue give inconsistent answers to the
question whether there is an enforceable obligation. One law provides for the
release of all claims provable in bankruptcy and prohibits creditors from
enforcing them, while the other disregards this release and allows for the use
of a debt enforcement mechanism on such a claim by precisely excluding a
discharge in bankruptcy. This is a true incompatibility. In a case like this one, the test for operational conflict cannot be
limited to asking whether the debtor can comply with both laws by renouncing
the protection afforded under the federal law or the privilege he or she is
otherwise entitled to under the provincial law. In that regard, the debtor’s
response to the suspension of his or her driving privileges is not
determinative. In analyzing the operational conflict at issue in this case, we
cannot disregard the fact that whether the debtor pays or not, the province, as
a creditor, is still compelling payment of a provable claim that has been
released, which is in direct contradiction with s. 178(2) of the BIA .
Neither can the question under the operational conflict branch of the
paramountcy test be whether it
is possible to refrain from applying the provincial law in order to avoid the
alleged conflict with the federal law. Such an approach would render the first
branch of the paramountcy test meaningless, since it is
virtually always possible to avoid the application of a provincial law so as
not to cause a conflict with a federal law. Furthermore, if it is possible to avoid operational
conflict simply by declining to apply the provincial law, the same could be
done to avoid any frustration of the federal purpose under the second branch of
the paramountcy test. In this case, it is impossible for the province to apply
s. 102 without contravening s. 178(2) . In effect, s. 102 creates a
new class of exempt debts that is not listed in s. 178(1) of the BIA . Hence,
the provincial law allows the very same thing that the federal law prohibits.
The result is an operational conflict.
Section 102 also frustrates
the financial rehabilitation of the bankrupt. The crushing burden of the
province’s claim against M was the main reason for his bankruptcy. If s. 102 is
allowed to operate despite M’s discharge, he is not offered the opportunity to
rehabilitate that Parliament intended to give him. Had Parliament intended
judgment debts arising from motor vehicle accidents, or the resulting
regulatory charges, to survive bankruptcy, it would have stated so expressly in
s. 178(1) of the BIA . It did not. It is beyond the province’s
constitutional authority to interfere with Parliament’s discretion in that
regard. Nor can M’s driving privileges serve as fresh consideration for a new
binding contract for the repayment of the discharged debt. M need not enter
into such a contract in order to recover his driving privileges, because the
province has no authority to withhold them.
The TSA does not however
disrupt the equitable distribution purpose of the BIA . This Court has
repeatedly cautioned against giving too broad a scope to paramountcy on the
basis of frustration of federal purpose. It is always essential to ascertain
the exact purpose of the specific provision of the federal law that is at
issue. Although it is clear that the purpose of s. 178(2) is to ensure the
debtor’s financial rehabilitation and that s. 102 frustrates that purpose, it
cannot be concluded that the operation of the provincial scheme in the context
of this case interferes with the equitable distribution of assets.
Per McLachlin C.J.
and Côté J.: Section 102 of the TSA
frustrates the purpose of financial rehabilitation of the bankrupt that
underlies s. 178(2) of the BIA . It is accordingly inoperative to
the extent of the conflict by reason of the doctrine of federal paramountcy. As
the frustration of one federal purpose is sufficient to trigger the application
of the doctrine of federal paramountcy, it is not necessary to address the
purpose of equitable distribution.
There
is no operational conflict to speak of in this case. The majority’s analysis
contrasts with the clear standard that has been adopted for the purpose of
determining whether an operational conflict exists in the context of the
federal paramountcy test: impossibility of dual compliance as a result of an
express conflict. Impossibility of dual compliance is the undisputed standard
for determining whether an operational conflict exists and it is one that very
few cases will meet. In the jurisprudence, impossibility of dual compliance has
become synonymous with operational conflict. The requirement of an express
contradiction is inseparable from impossibility of dual compliance. For the two
laws to conflict, each one has to say exactly the opposite of what the other
says. A less direct conflict is not enough. In the absence of an express
conflict, the two laws are deemed to be capable of operating side by side. In
light of the modern jurisprudence, this restrained approach to operational
conflict is inescapable. Such a high standard is consistent with co‑operative
federalism. If, in practice, the wording of the statutes makes it possible to
comply with both of them, then co‑operative federalism requires a court
to find that the federal and provincial statutes are compatible, at least at
the first stage of the analysis.
The
two branches of the modern federal paramountcy test relate to two different
forms of conflict. A finding of an operational conflict in the first branch
will not necessarily entail a finding of frustration of a federal purpose in
the second branch. The first branch is concerned with an incompatibility that
is evident on the face of the provisions themselves. Even a superficial
possibility of dual compliance will suffice for a court to conclude that there
is no operational conflict. If the federal law is prohibitive, as in the case
at bar, the question becomes what exactly it prohibits. If the provincial law
allows the very same thing the federal law prohibits, there is an operational
conflict. In many cases, the two branches of the test have been confused.
Although this Court’s past decisions are not always helpful when it comes to
drawing a distinction between the two branches, they do support three
propositions: (1) that the applicable standard for the first branch is
impossibility of dual compliance caused by an express conflict, (2) that
this is a high standard that should be applied with restraint, and only in very
few cases, and (3) that the two branches are distinct and address
different forms of conflict.
Consequently,
at the first stage, the determining question is whether the province’s
legislation provides a path on which dual compliance is possible. A high
standard at the first stage merely means that in most cases, the purpose and
effects of the legislation at issue will need to be analyzed at the second
stage. Requiring courts to deal with the issue in the second branch has many
advantages. For the frustration of purpose analysis, the federal legislative
intent must be established by the party relying on it. The court can proceed
with a careful analysis of Parliament’s intent and, if possible, interpret the
federal law so as not to interfere with the provincial law. The impossibility
standard, if applied strictly, will not render the first branch of the federal
paramountcy test meaningless. If the provincial law allows or requires something
that the federal law explicitly prohibits, or if the conflict is direct rather
than indirect, there will be an operational conflict.
In
the case at bar, it is clear from the provisions themselves that dual
compliance is not impossible. The provisions at issue do not expressly
conflict; they are different in terms of their contents and of the remedies
that they provide. One of them does not permit what the other specifically
prohibits. Under s. 178 of the BIA , a bankrupt is discharged from
claims provable in bankruptcy. That section says nothing more. Section 102
of the TSA does not revive an extinguished claim per se; if
a debtor chooses not to drive, the province simply cannot enforce its
claim. He can also opt to voluntarily pay the discharged debt. The bankrupt is
still discharged in the literal sense of the words of s. 178(2) of the BIA .
The two statutes answer different questions. In the end, the literal
requirement of the federal statute is, strictly speaking, met. It therefore
follows that the two acts can operate side by side without operational
conflict, although there is a frustration of purpose.
Cases Cited
By Gascon J.
Distinguished:
Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. v. Saskatchewan, 2005 SCC 13, [2005]
1 S.C.R. 188; Quebec (Attorney General) v. Canadian Owners and Pilots
Association, 2010 SCC 39, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 536; discussed: Canadian
Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007 SCC 22, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 3; Husky Oil
Operations Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 453;
British Columbia (Attorney General) v. Lafarge Canada Inc., 2007 SCC 23,
[2007] 2 S.C.R. 86; 114957 Canada Ltée (Spraytech, Société d’arrosage) v.
Hudson (Town), 2001 SCC 40, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 241; M & D Farm Ltd. v.
Manitoba Agricultural Credit Corp., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 961; referred to:
Reference re Secession of Quebec, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217; Re the
Initiative and Referendum Act, [1919] A.C. 935; Multiple Access Ltd. v.
McCutcheon, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 161; Reference re Securities Act, 2011
SCC 66, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 837; Canada (Attorney General) v. PHS Community
Services Society, 2011 SCC 44, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 134; Marine Services
International Ltd. v. Ryan Estate, 2013 SCC 44, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 53; Reference
re Firearms Act (Can.), 2000 SCC 31, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 783; Law Society of
British Columbia v. Mangat, 2001 SCC 67, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 113; Sun
Indalex Finance, LLC v. United Steelworkers, 2013 SCC 6, [2013] 1 S.C.R.
271; Garland v. Consumers’ Gas Co., 2004 SCC 25, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 629; Smith
v. The Queen, [1960] S.C.R. 776; Saskatchewan (Attorney General) v.
Lemare Lake Logging Ltd., 2015 SCC 53, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 419; Bank of
Montreal v. Hall, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 121; Bank of Montreal v. Marcotte,
2014 SCC 55, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 725; Irwin Toy Ltd. v. Quebec (Attorney
General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 927; Quebec (Attorney General) v. Canada
(Human Resources and Social Development), 2011 SCC 60, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 635;
Clarke v. Clarke, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 795; Attorney General of Canada v.
Law Society of British Columbia, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 307; O’Grady v.
Sparling, [1960] S.C.R. 804; Deloitte Haskins and Sells Ltd. v. Workers’
Compensation Board, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 785; Century Services Inc. v. Canada
(Attorney General), 2010 SCC 60, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 379; R. v. Fitzgibbon,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1005; Schreyer v. Schreyer, 2011 SCC 35, [2011] 2 S.C.R.
605; Industrial Acceptance Corp. v. Lalonde, [1952] 2 S.C.R. 109; Vachon
v. Canada Employment and Immigration Commission, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 417; GMAC
Commercial Credit Corp. — Canada v. T.C.T. Logistics Inc., 2006 SCC 35,
[2006] 2 S.C.R. 123; Ross v. Registrar of Motor Vehicles, [1975] 1
S.C.R. 5; Provincial Secretary of Prince Edward Island v. Egan, [1941]
S.C.R. 396; Thomson v. Alberta (Transportation and Safety Board), 2003
ABCA 256, 232 D.L.R. (4th) 237; Newfoundland and Labrador v. AbitibiBowater
Inc., 2012 SCC 67, [2012] 3 S.C.R. 443; Ontario (Minister of Finance) v.
Clarke, 2013 ONSC 1920, 115 O.R. (3d) 33; R. v. White, [1999] 2
S.C.R. 417; 407 ETR Concession Co. v. Canada (Superintendent of Bankruptcy),
2015 SCC 52, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 397; Gorguis v. Saskatchewan Government
Insurance, 2011 SKQB 132, 372 Sask. R. 152, rev’d 2013 SKCA 32, 414 Sask.
R. 5; Buchanan v. Superline Fuels Inc., 2007 NSCA 68, 255 N.S.R. (2d)
286; Miller, Re (2001), 27 C.B.R. (4th) 107; Lucar, Re (2001), 32
C.B.R. (4th) 270; Roncarelli v. Duplessis, [1959] S.C.R. 121; British
Columbia v. Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd., 2005 SCC 49, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 473;
Reference re Remuneration of Judges of the Provincial Court of Prince Edward
Island, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 3.
By Côté J.
Discussed:
M & D Farm Ltd. v. Manitoba Agricultural Credit Corp., [1999] 2
S.C.R. 961; British Columbia (Attorney General) v. Lafarge Canada Inc.,
2007 SCC 23, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 86; Canadian Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007
SCC 22, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 3; 114957 Canada Ltée (Spraytech, Société
d’arrosage) v. Hudson (Town), 2001 SCC 40, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 241; Husky
Oil Operations Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 453; referred
to: Multiple Access Ltd. v. McCutcheon, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 161; Rothmans,
Benson & Hedges Inc. v. Saskatchewan, 2005 SCC 13, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 188;
Quebec (Attorney General) v. Canadian Owners and Pilots Association,
2010 SCC 39, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 536; Rio Hotel Ltd. v. New Brunswick (Liquor
Licensing Board), [1987] 2 S.C.R. 59; NIL/TU,O Child and Family Services
Society v. B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union, 2010 SCC 45,
[2010] 2 S.C.R. 696; Marine Services International Ltd. v. Ryan Estate,
2013 SCC 44, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 53; Law Society of British Columbia v. Mangat,
2001 SCC 67, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 113; Quebec (Attorney General) v. Canada (Human
Resources and Social Development), 2011 SCC 60, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 635; Bank
of Montreal v. Hall, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 121; Canada (Superintendent of
Bankruptcy) v. 407 ETR Concession Company Ltd., 2013 ONCA 769, 118 O.R.
(3d) 161; Sun Indalex Finance, LLC v. United Steelworkers, 2013 SCC 6,
[2013] 1 S.C.R. 271.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act respecting the preservation of agricultural land and
agricultural activities, R.S.Q., c. P‑41.1.
Aeronautics Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. A‑2 .
Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. B‑3, ss. 69.3 , 69.4 , 72(1) , 121(1) , 136 , 137(1) , 139 ,
140.1 , 141 , 172 , 178 .
Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑36 .
Constitution Act, 1867, ss. 91 , 92 .
Family Farm Protection Act, C.C.S.M.,
c. F15.
Farm Debt Review Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c. 25 (2nd Supp.).
Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I‑2,
ss. 30, 69(1).
Legal Profession Act, S.B.C. 1987,
c. 25, s. 1 “practice of law”.
Marine Liability Act, S.C. 2001,
c. 6 .
Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act,
R.S.A. 2000, c. M‑22, s. 5(1), (2), (7).
Personal Property Security Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. P.10.
Tobacco Act, S.C. 1997, c. 13 .
Tobacco Control Act, S.S. 2001,
c. T‑14.1.
Traffic Safety Act, R.S.A. 2000,
c. T‑6, ss. 54, 102, 103.
Authors Cited
Alberta. Legislative Assembly. Alberta Hansard, 3rd Sess.,
24th Leg., April 12, 1999, p. 927.
Black’s Law Dictionary, 10th ed. by
Bryan A. Garner, ed. St. Paul, Minn.: Thomson
Reuters, 2014, “enforce”, “release”.
Brun, Henri, Guy Tremblay et Eugénie Brouillet. Droit
constitutionnel, 6e éd. Cowansville, Que.: Yvon Blais,
2014.
Canada. Study Committee on Bankruptcy and Insolvency Legislation. Bankruptcy
and Insolvency: Report of the Study Committee on Bankruptcy and Insolvency
Legislation. Ottawa: Information Canada, 1970.
Colvin, Eric. “Constitutional Law — Paramountcy — Duplication and
Express Contradiction — Multiple Access Ltd. v. McCutcheon” (1983), 17 U.B.C.
L. Rev. 347.
Hogg, Peter W. Constitutional Law of Canada, 5th ed.
Supp. Toronto: Carswell, 2007 (updated 2014, release 1).
Hogg, Peter W. “Paramountcy and Tobacco” (2006), 34 S.C.L.R.
(2d) 335.
Houlden, L. W., G. B. Morawetz and Janis Sarra. Bankruptcy
and Insolvency Law of Canada, 4th ed. (rev.). Toronto: Carswell, 2013
(updated 2015, release 6).
Wood, Roderick J. Bankruptcy and Insolvency Law.
Toronto: Irwin Law, 2009.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Alberta Court of Appeal (Berger, Watson and
Slatter JJ.A.), 2014 ABCA 68, 91 Alta. L.R. (5th) 221, 569 A.R. 177, 370
D.L.R. (4th) 267, 9 C.B.R. (6th) 278, 64 M.V.R. (6th) 82, [2014] 4 W.W.R. 272,
[2014] A.J. No. 155 (QL), 2014 CarswellAlta 225 (WL Can.), affirming a
decision of Moen J., 2012 ABQB 644, 73 Alta. L.R. (5th) 44, 550 A.R. 257, 39
M.V.R. (6th) 21, [2012] A.J. No. 1094 (QL), 2012 CarswellAlta 1757 (WL
Can.). Appeal dismissed.
Lillian Riczu, for the appellant.
R. Jeremy Newton, for the respondent.
Josh Hunter and Daniel Huffaker, for the intervener the
Attorney General of Ontario.
Alain Gingras, for the intervener the
Attorney General of Quebec.
Richard M. Butler, for the intervener the
Attorney General of British Columbia.
Thomson Irvine, for the intervener the
Attorney General for Saskatchewan.
Peter Southey and Michael Lema, for the intervener the
Superintendent of Bankruptcy.
The judgment of Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell,
Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Wagner and Gascon JJ. was delivered by
Gascon J. —
I.
Overview
[1]
In Canada, the federal and provincial levels of
government must enact laws within the limits of their respective spheres of
jurisdiction. The Constitution Act, 1867 defines which matters fall
within the exclusive legislative authority of each level. Still, even when
acting within its own sphere, one level of government will sometimes affect
matters within the other’s sphere of jurisdiction. The resulting legislative
overlap may, on occasion, lead to a conflict between otherwise valid federal
and provincial laws. In this appeal, the Court must decide whether such a
conflict exists, and if so, resolve it.
[2]
The alleged conflict in this case concerns, on
the one hand, the federal Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.
B-3 (“BIA ”), and on the other hand, Alberta’s Traffic Safety Act,
R.S.A. 2000, c. T-6 (“TSA”). It stems from a car accident caused by the
respondent while he was uninsured, contrary to s. 54 of the TSA. The
province of Alberta compensated the individual injured in the accident and
sought to recover the amount of the compensation from the respondent. The
latter, however, made an assignment in bankruptcy and was eventually
discharged. The BIA governs bankruptcy and provides that, upon
discharge, the respondent is released from all debts that are claims provable
in bankruptcy. The TSA governs the activity of driving, including
vehicle permits and driver’s licences, and allows the province to suspend the
respondent’s licence and permits until he pays the amount of the compensation.
[3]
As a result of his bankruptcy and subsequent
discharge, the respondent did not pay the amount of the compensation in full;
because of this failure to pay, Alberta suspended his vehicle permits and
driver’s licence. The respondent contested this suspension, arguing that the TSA
conflicted with the BIA , in that it frustrated the purposes of
bankruptcy. The province replied that there was no conflict since the TSA
was regulatory in nature and did not purport to enforce a discharged debt. The
Court of Queen’s Bench and the Court of Appeal found that there was a conflict between
the federal and provincial laws. Relying on the doctrine of federal
paramountcy, they declared the impugned provision of the TSA to be
inoperative to the extent of the conflict. I agree with the outcome reached by
the lower courts, and I would dismiss the appeal.
II.
Facts
[4]
The car accident caused by the respondent
occurred in 1989. In 1996, the individual injured in the accident obtained
judgment against the respondent in the amount of $194,875. The Administrator
appointed under the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act, R.S.A. 2000, c.
M-22 (“MVACA”), indemnified the injured party for the amount of the
judgment debt and was assigned the debt in accordance with the MVACA.
Initially, the respondent made arrangements with the Administrator to pay the
debt in instalments. Some years later, however, in January 2008, he made an
assignment in bankruptcy. He listed the Administrator’s claim in his Statement
of Affairs. It is not disputed that the judgment debt assigned to the
Administrator was a claim provable in bankruptcy. It was, by far, the
respondent’s most substantial debt and, in fact, the reason for his financial
difficulties. At the time of the assignment, the outstanding amount due to the
Administrator stood at $195,823.
[5]
In June 2011, the respondent obtained an
absolute discharge, which no one opposed. In October of the same year, he
received a letter from the Director, Driver Fitness and Monitoring, notifying
him that, by application of s. 102(1) of the TSA, his operator’s licence
and vehicle registration privileges would be suspended until payment of the
outstanding amount of the judgment debt. Later, in November, his lawyer
received another letter, this time from Motor Vehicle Accident Recoveries,
advising the respondent that he “remains indebted for the judgment debt
obtained against him . . . ‘until the judgment is satisfied or
discharged, otherwise than by a discharge in bankruptcy’” (A.R., at p. 49).
The letter proposed that new payment arrangements be made, failing which the suspension
of his driving privileges would continue.
[6]
Given this situation, in March 2012, the
respondent sought an order from the Court of Queen’s Bench to stay the
suspension of his driving privileges. He claimed that he had been discharged
in bankruptcy and that s. 178 of the BIA precluded the Administrator
from enforcing the judgment debt.
III.
Judicial History
A.
Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench, 2012 ABQB 644,
73 Alta. L.R. (5th) 44
[7]
Moen J. first found that, as a result of the
discharge, there was no longer a liability on the basis of which the judgment
could be enforced (para. 21). In her view, the question at issue was whether
the discharge precluded the province from suspending the respondent’s driving
privileges because of the unpaid judgment debt. This entailed looking at the
operation of the TSA and the BIA and determining whether the
relevant provisions were in conflict, making the doctrine of paramountcy
applicable. According to Moen J., an “operational conflict” could arise in two
situations, namely where (1) “compliance with both acts is rendered
inconsistent or impossible by directly conflicting with an express provision of
the BIA ” or (2) “the TSA has the intent and/or effect of
interfering with the provisions of the BIA or its fundamental
objectives” (para. 30).
[8]
Moen J. emphasized the rehabilitative purpose of
the BIA (para. 31). She described the purpose of the TSA as
being the “protection of public safety via the regulation of traffic and motor
vehicles” (para. 33), and the purpose of s. 102 of the TSA as “preventing
‘irresponsible drivers from having the continued privilege of driving . . .
without being made to account for the normal consequences of their vast
irresponsibilities’” (para. 34). She distinguished situations in which the
purpose of licence suspension is the collection of a debt from those in which
it is the regulation of conduct (paras. 37-42). She concluded that the sole
purpose of s. 102 is the collection of an unpaid judgment debt. In her view,
the provision had nothing to do with the regulation of the respondent’s
misconduct (para. 43). She thus held that the province’s actions were not
disciplinary, but rather “a method of debt collection, and a colourable attempt
to circumvent the provisions of the BIA ” (para. 45). This “improper
purpose” of the TSA created an “operational conflict” with the BIA
(para. 45). She therefore stayed both the enforcement of the judgment debt and
the suspension of the respondent’s driving privileges (para. 49), and she
declared the TSA ineffective to the extent of the conflict with the BIA
(para. 48).
B.
Alberta Court of Appeal, 2014 ABCA 68, 91 Alta.
L.R. (5th) 221
[9]
Writing for a unanimous court, Slatter J.A.
described the two types of conflict that trigger the application of the
doctrine of paramountcy as follows: (1) “it is impossible to comply with both
the provincial and the federal legislation”, or (2) “even though it is
technically possible to comply with both, the application of the provincial
statute can fairly be said to frustrate Parliament’s legislative purpose”
(para. 10). He concluded that because the respondent could comply with both
laws by not driving, there was no conflict under the first branch of the test
(para. 10).
[10]
Turning to the second branch, Slatter J.A.
described the two purposes of the BIA as being, first, equal
distribution, and second, rehabilitation. He observed that s. 178 lists the
debts that are not discharged by bankruptcy, none of which corresponds to
judgment debts for damages resulting from motor vehicle accidents (paras.
13-15). According to him, while discharge from bankruptcy does not extinguish
debts, nonetheless, “[w]hatever conceptual distinction there may be, it is
somewhat artificial in the present context”, as creditors cease to be able to
enforce the discharged debts (para. 19). Slatter J.A. rejected the province’s
argument that driving privileges can be used as fresh consideration to revive a
discharged debt; such consideration is not genuine and it is inconsistent with
the policy of the BIA (paras. 20-21). Rejecting another of the
province’s arguments, he held that it is irrelevant that driving privileges do
not constitute property of the bankrupt. The province cannot withhold
privileges arbitrarily in a way that frustrates the purposes of the BIA
(paras. 23-24).
[11]
Slatter J.A. observed that s. 102 of the TSA
specifically provides that it operates notwithstanding a discharge in
bankruptcy. In his view, this is a “prima facie signal of a
potential operational conflict” (para. 39). Although s. 102 is not
coercive and the respondent could choose not to drive, Slatter J.A. concluded
that it nonetheless frustrates the purposes of the BIA . One of these
purposes is that the discharged bankrupt “will not have to make any such
‘choices’” and will be “free to make independent and unencumbered personal and
economic decisions going forward” (para. 43). Because s. 102 is focused on
debt collection and is not connected to traffic safety considerations (paras.
40 and 45-47), it interferes with a driver’s ability to make a fresh start
(paras. 48-49). Slatter J.A. also concluded that s. 102 disrupts fair and
equal distribution to creditors because it permits the province to collect
amounts in addition to the dividend ordinarily distributed to creditors (para.
50). He held that s. 102 frustrates both purposes of the BIA and
that the words “otherwise than by a discharge in bankruptcy” are in
“operational conflict” with the BIA (para. 54).
IV.
Issue
[12]
The Chief Justice formulated the following
constitutional question:
Is s. 102(2) of the Alberta Traffic
Safety Act, R.S.A. 2000, c. T-6, constitutionally inoperative by reason of
the doctrine of federal paramountcy?
Although the
constitutional question, as formulated, refers only to s. 102(2), the
proceedings below and the parties’ submissions concern the section in its
entirety. Accordingly, I will examine all of the relevant aspects of s. 102.
V.
Analysis
[13]
Various government actors have been involved in
this dispute. Unless otherwise specified, I will refer to the province of
Alberta as encompassing these different actors. I will first review the
principles applicable to the doctrine of federal paramountcy and then apply
them to the facts of this appeal.
A.
The Doctrine of Federal Paramountcy
[14]
Each level of government — Parliament, on the
one hand, and the provincial legislatures, on the other — has exclusive
authority to enact legislation with respect to certain subject matters.
Sections 91 and 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867 assign each
power to the level of government best suited to exercise it: Reference re
Secession of Quebec, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217 (“Secession Reference”), at
para. 58. Broad powers were given to the provincial legislatures with respect
to local matters, in recognition of regional diversity, while powers relating
to matters of national importance were given to Parliament, to ensure unity: Canadian
Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007 SCC 22, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 3, at para. 22.
[15]
Legislative powers are exclusive, and one
government is not subordinate to the other: Secession Reference,
at para. 58, citing Re the Initiative and Referendum Act, [1919]
A.C. 935 (P.C.), at p. 942. However, the legislative matrix is not as clearly
defined as ss. 91 and 92 might suggest. It is often impossible for one level
of government to legislate effectively within its jurisdiction without
affecting matters that are within the other level’s jurisdiction: Western
Bank, at para. 29; H. Brun, G. Tremblay and E. Brouillet, Droit
constitutionnel (6th ed. 2014), at p. 465. Furthermore, it is often
impossible to make a statute fall squarely within a single head of power: Multiple
Access Ltd. v. McCutcheon, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 161, at pp. 180-81. This leads
to overlap in the exercise of provincial and federal powers. The tendency has
been to allow these overlaps to occur as long as each level of government
properly pursues objectives that fall within its jurisdiction: Reference re
Securities Act, 2011 SCC 66, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 837, at para. 57; Canada
(Attorney General) v. PHS Community Services Society, 2011 SCC 44, [2011] 3
S.C.R. 134, at para. 62; Western Bank, at paras. 37 and 42. This
tendency reflects the theory of co-operative federalism: Western Bank,
at para. 24; Husky Oil Operations Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue,
[1995] 3 S.C.R. 453, at para. 162.
[16]
That said, there comes a point where legislative
overlap jeopardizes the balance between unity and diversity. In certain
circumstances, the powers of one level of government must be protected against
intrusions, even incidental ones, by the other level: Western Bank, at
para. 32. To protect against such intrusions, the Court has developed various
constitutional doctrines. For the purposes of this appeal, I need only refer
to one: the doctrine of federal paramountcy. This doctrine “recognizes that
where laws of the federal and provincial levels come into conflict, there must
be a rule to resolve the impasse”: Western Bank, at para. 32. When
there is a genuine “inconsistency” between federal and provincial legislation,
that is, when “the operational effects of provincial legislation are
incompatible with federal legislation”, the federal law prevails: Marine
Services International Ltd. v. Ryan Estate, 2013 SCC 44, [2013] 3 S.C.R.
53, at para. 65, quoting Western Bank, at para. 69; see also Marine
Services, at paras. 66-68; Multiple Access, at p. 168. The question
thus becomes how to determine whether such a conflict exists.
[17]
First and foremost, it is necessary to ensure
that the overlapping federal and provincial laws are independently valid: Western
Bank, at para. 76; Husky Oil, at para. 87. This means determining
the pith and substance of the impugned provisions by looking at their purpose
and effect: Western Bank, at para. 27; Reference re Firearms Act
(Can.), 2000 SCC 31, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 783, at para. 16. Once a provision’s
true purpose is identified, its validity will depend on whether it falls within
the powers of the enacting government: Law Society of British Columbia v.
Mangat, 2001 SCC 67, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 113, at para. 24. If the legislation
of one level of government is invalid, no conflict can ever arise, which puts
an end to the inquiry. If both laws are independently valid, however, the
court must determine whether their concurrent operation results in a conflict.
[18]
A conflict is said to arise in one of two
situations, which form the two branches of the paramountcy test: (1) there is
an operational conflict because it is impossible to comply with both laws, or
(2) although it is possible to comply with both laws, the operation of the
provincial law frustrates the purpose of the federal enactment.
[19]
What is considered to be the first branch of the
test was described as follows in Multiple Access, the seminal decision
of the Court on this issue:
In principle, there would seem to be no
good reasons to speak of paramountcy and preclusion except where there is actual
conflict in operation as where one enactment says “yes” and the other says
“no”; “the same citizens are being told to do inconsistent things”; compliance
with one is defiance of the other. [Emphasis added; p. 191.]
In Western Bank,
Binnie and LeBel JJ. referred to this passage as “the fundamental test for
determining whether there is sufficient incompatibility to trigger the
application of the doctrine of federal paramountcy” (para. 71). Under that
test, the question is whether there is an actual conflict in operation, that
is, whether both laws “can operate side by side without conflict” (Marine
Services, at para. 76) or whether both “laws can apply concurrently,
and citizens can comply with either of them without violating the other”: Western
Bank, at para. 72; see also Sun Indalex Finance, LLC v. United
Steelworkers, 2013 SCC 6, [2013] 1 S.C.R. 271, at para. 60; Marine
Services, at para. 68; British Columbia (Attorney General) v. Lafarge
Canada Inc., 2007 SCC 23, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 86, at paras. 77 and 81-82; Garland
v. Consumers’ Gas Co., 2004 SCC 25, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 629, at para. 53; Smith
v. The Queen, [1960] S.C.R. 776, at p. 800, per Martland J.
[20]
In her concurring reasons, my colleague Côté J.
formulates this first branch of the test as impossibility of dual compliance as
a result of or caused by “an express conflict” (paras. 93 and 122). She cites
in support (paras. 102-3) this Court’s use of the terms “express contradiction”
in 114957 Canada Ltée (Spraytech, Société d’arrosage) v. Hudson (Town),
2001 SCC 40, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 241, at para. 34, and M & D Farm Ltd.
v. Manitoba Agricultural Credit Corp., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 961, at para. 17, as
well as the use by Bastarache J. of the terms “express or ‘operational conflict’”
in Western Bank (para. 126) and Lafarge (para. 113). She
insists that under this first branch, the express conflict or express
contradiction must be found merely on the basis of the “actual words” of the
provisions at issue (paras. 105 and 108) and their “literal” sense or
requirement (para. 97). She considers that prior cases in which this Court
found that an operational conflict existed either mischaracterized the test (at
paras. 116-17, she cites Lafarge) or conflated it with the second branch
pertaining to frustration of purpose (at paras. 115 and 118, she cites Husky
Oil and M & D Farm).
[21]
I respectfully disagree with these propositions
and with my colleague’s assessment of this Court’s past cases on the first
branch of the paramountcy test. I would not characterize these as being “not
helpful authority” (para. 118) and as having “confused” the two branches (para.
114). Rather, in my view, this Court’s decisions on operational conflict have
been coherent and consistent since Multiple Access.
[22]
First, the expression “express contradiction”
used in those cases originated in Multiple Access. Dickson J. initially
used it — at p. 187, in discussing prior decisions of the Court — to describe
the test that he ultimately formulated, in the above-quoted passage, as that of
“actual conflict in operation” or operational conflict (p. 191). An express
contradiction is nothing more than a clear, direct or definite conflict in
operation, as opposed to an indirect or imprecise one. It is not an additional
condition for a finding of actual conflict in operation.
[23]
Second, I find no indication in the Court’s
decisions pertaining to this first branch that the assessment of an actual
conflict in operation is limited to the actual words or to the literal meaning
of the words of the provisions at issue; quite the contrary. In its recent
decision in Marine Services for instance, in assessing whether there was
an actual conflict in operation under the first branch (paras. 71-83), the
Court did not limit itself to a mere literal reading of the provisions at
issue. Rather, it found that a proper reading of the provisions based on the
modern approach to statutory interpretation (paras. 77-79) led to the
conclusion that the provincial and federal laws could operate side by side without
conflict (para. 76). With respect, my colleague misreads my remarks when she
states that I support in this regard a broad interpretation of ambiguous
federal statutes under this first branch (paras. 111-13). This is not so. Marine
Services emphasizes that it is the proper meaning of the provision that
remains central to the analysis, not merely its literal sense. As I explain
below, the provisions at issue in this case are not ambiguous, and I do not
give them a broad interpretation to find their ordinary and undisputed
meaning. The harmonious interpretation referred to by my colleague is a rule
of constitutional interpretation that applies to both branches of the
paramountcy test, not merely the first one: Saskatchewan (Attorney General)
v. Lemare Lake Logging Ltd., 2015 SCC 53, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 419, at para. 68.
It has, however, no bearing on the actual conflict in operation that is, in my
view, established here when both laws operate.
[24]
Finally, I consider that in Husky Oil
(para. 87) and M & D Farm (para. 40), Gonthier J. and Binnie J.
respectively referred to the “actual conflict in operation” concept drawn from Multiple
Access without confusing the two branches of the paramountcy test.
As for the reasons of Binnie and LeBel JJ. in Lafarge, issued on the
same day as Western Bank (in which they also penned the majority
reasons), I find it hard to suggest that they misstated the test or conflated
its two branches, which they in fact analyzed separately (the first at paras.
81-82 and the second at paras. 83-85). On operational conflict, their reference
to an “impossibility of . . . simultaneous application” (Lafarge, at
para. 77) echoed the similar comments made in Western Bank to the effect
that the test amounts to assessing whether “the [two] laws can apply
concurrently” (Western Bank, at para. 72): see also, on the concept of
possible concurrent “application” of both laws, Rothmans, Benson &
Hedges Inc. v. Saskatchewan, 2005 SCC 13, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 188, at para. 23.
[25]
If there is no conflict under the first branch
of the test, one may still be found under the second branch. In Bank of
Montreal v. Hall, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 121, the Court formulated what is now
considered to be the second branch of the test. It framed the question as
being “whether operation of the provincial Act is compatible with the federal
legislative purpose” (p. 155). In other words, the effect of the provincial
law may frustrate the purpose of the federal law, even though it does “not
entail a direct violation of the federal law’s provisions”: Western Bank,
at para. 73.
[26]
That said, the case law assists in identifying
typical situations where overlapping legislation will not lead to a conflict.
For instance, duplicative federal and provincial provisions will generally not
conflict: Bank of Montreal v. Marcotte, 2014 SCC 55, [2014] 2 S.C.R.
725, at para. 80; Western Bank, at para. 72; Multiple Access, at
p. 190; Hall, at p. 151. Nor will a conflict arise where a provincial
law is more restrictive than a federal law: Lemare Lake, at para. 25; Marine
Services, at paras. 76 and 84; Quebec (Attorney General) v. Canadian
Owners and Pilots Association, 2010 SCC 39, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 536 (“COPA”),
at paras. 67 and 74; Western Bank, at para. 103; Rothmans, at
paras. 18 ff.; Spraytech, at para. 35; Irwin Toy Ltd. v. Quebec
(Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 927, at p. 964. The application of a
more restrictive provincial law may, however, frustrate the federal purpose if
the federal law, instead of being merely permissive, provides for a positive entitlement:
Quebec (Attorney General) v. Canada (Human Resources and Social Development),
2011 SCC 60, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 635, at paras. 32-33 and 36; Lafarge, at
paras. 84-85; Mangat, at para. 72; Hall, at p. 153. As will
become evident from the discussion below, this appeal involves two laws that
directly contradict each other, rather than a provincial law which does not
fully contradict the federal one, but is only more restrictive than it: see M
& D Farm; Clarke v. Clarke, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 795.
[27]
Be it under the first or the second branch, the
burden of proof rests on the party alleging the conflict. Discharging that
burden is not an easy task, and the standard is always high. In keeping with
co-operative federalism, the doctrine of paramountcy is applied with
restraint. It is presumed that Parliament intends its laws to co-exist with
provincial laws. Absent a genuine inconsistency, courts will favour an
interpretation of the federal legislation that allows the concurrent operation
of both laws: Western Bank, at paras. 74-75, citing Attorney General
of Canada v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 307 (“Law
Society of B.C.”), at p. 356; see also Rothmans, at para. 21; O’Grady
v. Sparling, [1960] S.C.R. 804, at pp. 811 and 820. Conflict must be
defined narrowly, so that each level of government may act as freely as
possible within its respective sphere of authority: Husky Oil, at para.
162, per Iacobucci J. (dissenting, but not on this particular point), referring
to Deloitte Haskins and Sells Ltd. v. Workers’ Compensation Board,
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 785, at pp. 807-8, per Wilson J.
[28]
This is not to say, however, that courts must
refrain from applying the doctrine where the two laws are genuinely
inconsistent. In the assessment of such inconsistency for the purposes of
paramountcy, a provincial intention to interfere with the federal jurisdiction
is neither necessary nor sufficient. In fact, an intention to intrude may call
into question the independent validity of the provincial law: Husky Oil,
at paras. 44-45. The focus of the paramountcy analysis is instead on the
effect of the provincial law, rather than its purpose:
. . . there need not be any
provincial intention to intrude into the exclusive federal sphere of
bankruptcy . . . in order to render the provincial law inapplicable. It is sufficient
that the effect of provincial legislation is to do so. [Emphasis added.]
(Husky
Oil, at para. 39)
Assessing the effect of the
provincial law requires looking at the substance of the law, rather than its
form. The province cannot do indirectly what it is precluded from doing
directly: Husky Oil, at para. 39.
[29]
In sum, if the operation of the provincial law
has the effect of making it impossible to comply with the federal law, or if it
is technically possible to comply with both laws, but the operation of the
provincial law still has the effect of frustrating Parliament’s purpose, there
is a conflict. Such a conflict results in the provincial law being
inoperative, but only to the extent of the conflict with the federal law: Western
Bank, at para. 69; Rothmans, at para. 11; Mangat, at para.
74. In practice, this means that the provincial law remains valid, but will be
read down so as to not conflict with the federal law, though only for as long
as the conflict exists: Husky Oil, at para. 81; E. Colvin,
“Constitutional Law — Paramountcy — Duplication and Express Contradiction —
Multiple Access Ltd. v. McCutcheon” (1983), 17 U.B.C. L. Rev.
347, at p. 348.
[30]
I now turn to the application of the doctrine to
the facts of this appeal.
B.
Application
(1)
The Legislative Schemes at Issue
[31]
The first step of the analysis is to ensure that
the impugned federal and provincial provisions are independently valid. Early
in the proceedings, the parties recognized the validity of the relevant
provisions of the BIA and the TSA. Before this Court, they again
conceded the validity of both laws. The only question is whether their
concurrent operation results in a conflict. This requires analyzing the
legislative schemes at issue at the outset so as to reach a proper
understanding of the provisions that are allegedly in conflict.
(a)
The Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act
[32]
Parliament enacted the BIA pursuant to
its jurisdiction over matters of bankruptcy and insolvency under s. 91(21) of
the Constitution Act, 1867 . The BIA, notably through the
specific provisions discussed below, furthers two purposes: the equitable
distribution of the bankrupt’s assets among his or her creditors and the
bankrupt’s financial rehabilitation (Husky Oil, at para. 7).
[33]
The first purpose of bankruptcy, the equitable
distribution of assets, is achieved through a single proceeding model. Under
this model, creditors of the bankrupt wishing to enforce a claim provable in
bankruptcy must participate in one collective proceeding. This ensures that
the assets of the bankrupt are distributed fairly amongst the creditors. As a
general rule, all creditors rank equally and share rateably in the bankrupt’s
assets: s. 141 of the BIA ; Husky Oil, at para. 9. In Century
Services Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 SCC 60, [2010] 3 S.C.R.
379, at para. 22, the majority of the Court, per Deschamps J., explained the
underlying rationale for this model:
The single proceeding model avoids the
inefficiency and chaos that would attend insolvency if each creditor initiated
proceedings to recover its debt. Grouping all possible actions against the
debtor into a single proceeding controlled in a single forum facilitates
negotiation with creditors because it places them all on an equal footing,
rather than exposing them to the risk that a more aggressive creditor will
realize its claims against the debtor’s limited assets while the other
creditors attempt a compromise.
Avoiding inefficiencies
and chaos, and favouring an orderly collective process, maximizes global
recovery for all creditors: Husky Oil, at para. 7; R. J. Wood, Bankruptcy
and Insolvency Law (2009), at p. 3.
[34]
For this model to be viable, creditors must not
be allowed to enforce their provable claims individually, that is, outside the
collective proceeding. Section 69.3 of the BIA thus provides for an
automatic stay of proceedings, which is effective as of the first day of
bankruptcy:
69.3 (1)
Subject to subsections (1.1) and (2) and sections 69.4 and 69.5 , on the
bankruptcy of any debtor, no creditor has any remedy against the debtor or the
debtor’s property, or shall commence or continue any action, execution or other
proceedings, for the recovery of a claim provable in bankruptcy.
(See R. v. Fitzgibbon,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1005, at pp. 1015-16.)
[35]
Yet there are exceptions to the principle of equitable
distribution. Section 136 of the BIA provides that some creditors will
be paid in priority. These creditors are referred to as “preferred creditors”.
There are also creditors that are paid only after all ordinary creditors have
been satisfied: ss. 137(1) , 139 and 140.1 of the BIA . Furthermore, the
automatic stay of proceedings does not prevent secured creditors from realizing
their security interest: s. 69.3(2) of the BIA ; Husky Oil,
at para. 9. A court may also grant leave permitting a creditor to begin
separate proceedings and enforce a claim: s. 69.4 of the BIA . These
exceptions reflect the policy choices made by Parliament in furthering this
purpose of bankruptcy.
[36]
The second purpose of the BIA , the
financial rehabilitation of the debtor, is achieved through the discharge of
the debtor’s outstanding debts at the end of the bankruptcy: Husky Oil,
at para. 7. Section 178(2) of the BIA provides:
(2) Subject
to subsection (1), an order of discharge releases the bankrupt from all claims
provable in bankruptcy.
From the perspective of
the creditors, the discharge means they are unable to enforce their provable
claims: Schreyer v. Schreyer, 2011 SCC 35, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 605, at para.
21. This, in effect, gives the insolvent person a “fresh start”, in that he or
she is “freed from the burdens of pre-existing indebtedness”: Wood, at p. 273;
see also Industrial Acceptance Corp. v. Lalonde, [1952] 2 S.C.R. 109, at
p. 120. This fresh start is not only designed for the well-being of the
bankrupt debtor and his or her family; rehabilitation helps the discharged
bankrupt to reintegrate into economic life so he or she can become a productive
member of society: Wood, at pp. 274-75; L. W. Houlden, G. B. Morawetz and J.
Sarra, Bankruptcy and Insolvency Law of Canada (4th ed. rev. (loose-leaf)),
at p. 6-283. In many cases of consumer bankruptcy, the debtor has very few or
no assets to distribute to his or her creditors. In those cases,
rehabilitation becomes the primary objective of bankruptcy: Wood, at
p. 37.
[37]
Although it is an important purpose of the BIA ,
financial rehabilitation also has its limits. Section 178(1) of the BIA
lists debts that are not released by discharge and that survive bankruptcy.
Furthermore, s. 172 provides that an order of discharge may be denied,
suspended, or granted subject to conditions. These provisions demonstrate
Parliament’s attempt to balance financial rehabilitation with other policy
objectives, such as confidence in the credit system, that require certain debts
to survive bankruptcy: Wood, at pp. 273 and 289.
[38]
Discharge is the main rehabilitative tool
contained in the BIA , but it is not the only one. As Professor Wood, at
p. 273, observes:
The bankruptcy discharge is one of the
primary mechanisms through which bankruptcy law attempts to provide for the
economic rehabilitation of the debtor. However, it is not the only means by
which bankruptcy law seeks to meet this objective. The exclusion of exempt
property from distribution to creditors, the surplus income provisions, and mandatory
credit counselling also are directed towards this goal.
[39]
Another means of rehabilitation is the automatic
stay of proceedings contained in s. 69.3 of the BIA . The stay not only
ensures that creditors are redirected into the collective proceeding described
above, it also ensures that creditors are precluded from seizing property that
is exempt from distribution to creditors. This is an important part of the
bankrupt’s financial rehabilitation:
The
rehabilitation of the bankrupt is not the result only of his discharge. It
begins when he is put into bankruptcy with measures designed to give him the
minimum needed for subsistence.
(Vachon v. Canada Employment and
Immigration Commission, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 417, at p. 430)
[40]
In many aspects, the BIA is a complete
code governing bankruptcy. It sets out which claims are treated as provable
claims and which assets are distributed to creditors, and how. It then sets
out which claims are released on discharge and which claims survive
bankruptcy. That said, the fact remains that the operation of the BIA
depends upon the survival of various provincial rights: Husky Oil, at
para. 85; Hall, at p. 155. In this regard, s. 72(1) of the BIA
provides:
72. (1) The provisions of this Act shall not be deemed to abrogate
or supersede the substantive provisions of any other law or statute relating to
property and civil rights that are not in conflict with this Act, and the
trustee is entitled to avail himself of all rights and remedies provided by
that law or statute as supplementary to and in addition to the rights and
remedies provided by this Act.
On the one hand, given
the procedural nature of the BIA , the bankruptcy regime relies heavily
on the continued existence of provincial substantive rights, and thus the continued
operation of provincial laws: Wood, at pp. 7-8; Husky Oil, at para. 30.
The ownership of certain assets and the existence of particular liabilities
depend upon provincial law: P. W. Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada
(5th ed. Supp.), at p. 25-8. On the other hand, the BIA cannot
operate without affecting property and civil rights. Section 72(1) confirms
this by stating that, where there is a genuine inconsistency between provincial
laws regarding property and civil rights and federal bankruptcy legislation,
the BIA prevails: see GMAC Commercial Credit Corp. — Canada v.
T.C.T. Logistics Inc., 2006 SCC 35, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 123, at para. 47.
[41]
In the context of this appeal, we are
specifically concerned with an alleged conflict between, on the one hand, one
provision of the BIA , namely s. 178 , the purpose of which is to ensure
the financial rehabilitation of the debtor, and, on the other hand, one
provision (s. 102) of the provincial scheme, to which I will now turn.
(b)
The Alberta Traffic Safety Act
[42]
The TSA is the provincial scheme with
which the BIA is alleged to conflict. Pursuant to s. 92(13) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 , provincial legislatures have the power to legislate with regard
to property and civil rights. The Court has long recognized that this power
includes traffic regulation and the authority to set conditions for driver’s
licences and vehicle permits: Ross v. Registrar of Motor Vehicles,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 5, at pp. 13-14; O’Grady, at p. 810; Provincial
Secretary of Prince Edward Island v. Egan, [1941] S.C.R. 396, at pp. 402
and 415; see also Thomson v. Alberta (Transportation and Safety Board),
2003 ABCA 256, 232 D.L.R. (4th) 237, at para. 25. The TSA is a
comprehensive legislative scheme for traffic regulation, “covering virtually
all aspects of the regulation of highways and motor vehicles in Alberta”, with
the aim of ensuring road safety: Thomson, at para. 5; Alberta
Legislative Assembly, Alberta Hansard, 3rd Sess., 24th Leg., April 12,
1999, at p. 927.
[43]
Under s. 54(1) of the TSA, no one is
allowed to drive or have a motor vehicle on a public road unless the vehicle is
insured. Under s. 54(4), a person who contravenes s. 54(1) is liable to a fine
or imprisonment. The Registrar of Motor Vehicle Services may also disqualify a
person from driving and cancel his or her vehicle registration until that
person shows proof of insurance: s. 54(5) and (7).
[44]
In the event that an uninsured driver causes an
accident, Alberta has implemented a compensation program governed by the MVACA.
A victim injured in the accident may sue the uninsured driver for damages. If
the victim is successful but the uninsured driver does not pay, the victim may
then apply to the Administrator under the MVACA for compensation in the
amount of the unsatisfied judgment: s. 5(1). If authorized, the payment
is drawn from the General Revenue Fund of the province: s. 5(2). The judgment
is then assigned to the Administrator, who can take steps to enforce it against
the judgment debtor. The Administrator is thus deemed to be the judgment
creditor: s. 5(7).
[45]
Section 102 of the TSA, the provision at
issue in this appeal, complements the MVACA program. It allows the
Registrar to suspend the debtor’s driver’s licence and vehicle permits until
the judgment debt is paid, up to a maximum amount of $200,000:
102(1) If
(a) a judgment for damages arising out of a motor vehicle
accident is rendered against a person by a court in Alberta or in any other
province or territory in Canada, and
(b) that person fails, within 15 days from the day on which
the judgment becomes final, to satisfy the judgment,
the
Registrar, subject to sections 103 and 104 and the regulations, may do one or
both of the following:
(c) disqualify the person from driving a motor vehicle in Alberta;
(d) suspend the registration of any motor vehicle registered in that
person’s name.
(2) When, under subsection (1), a person is disqualified from
driving a motor vehicle in Alberta or the certificate of registration of
that person’s motor vehicle is suspended,
(a) the disqualification or the suspension, as the case may be,
remains in effect and shall not be removed, and
(b) no motor vehicle shall be registered in that person’s name,
until the judgment is satisfied or discharged, otherwise than by a
discharge in bankruptcy, to the extent of
. . .
(f) at least $200 000, exclusive of interest and costs, if the
judgment arises out of a motor vehicle accident occurring on or after January
1, 1986.
[46]
Section 103 is also a relevant part of this
scheme. It allows the judgment debtor to apply for the “privilege” of paying
the outstanding judgment debt in instalments. The debtor may recover his or
her driving privileges as long as the payments are being made:
103(1) A judgment debtor to whom this Part applies may on notice to the
judgment creditor apply to the court in which the trial judgment was obtained for
the privilege of paying the judgment in instalments, and the court may, in
its discretion, so order, fixing the amounts and times of payment of the
instalments.
(2) If the Minister responsible for the administration of the Motor
Vehicle Accident Claims Act has made a payment with respect to a judgment
pursuant to the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act, the judgment debtor
(a) may apply to the Minister responsible for the administration
of the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act for the privilege of paying
the judgment in instalments, in which case that Minister may cause an
agreement to be entered into with the debtor for payment by instalments, or
(b) may apply to the court pursuant to subsection (1) for the privilege
of paying the judgment to the Minister responsible for the administration of
the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act in instalments, in which case
the debtor must give notice of the application to the Administrator of the Motor
Vehicle Accident Claims Act, who may appear personally or by counsel and be
heard on the application.
(3) Except in a case to which subsection (2) applies, a judgment
debtor and the judgment creditor may enter into an agreement for the payment of
the judgment in instalments.
(4) While the judgment debtor is not in default in payment of the
instalments, the judgment debtor is deemed not to be in default for the
purposes of this Part in payment of the judgment, and the Minister in the
Minister’s absolute discretion may restore the operator’s licence and the
certificate of registration of the judgment debtor.
(5) Notwithstanding subsection (4), if the Minister is satisfied that
the judgment debtor has defaulted with respect to complying with the terms of
the court order or of the agreement, the judgment debtor’s operator’s licence
and registration shall again be suspended and remain suspended as provided in section
102.
It is worth mentioning
that, in theory, ss. 102 and 103 of the TSA do not operate solely in
favour of the province. They could also operate in favour of a third party.
For instance, the Registrar could suspend the driver’s privileges solely for
the benefit of a victim of an accident who holds an unsatisfied judgment.
[47]
The purpose and effect of s. 102 are obvious
when it is read in its context: it is meant to deprive the judgment debtor of
driving privileges until the judgment arising from a motor vehicle accident is
paid in full, or periodic payments in satisfaction of the judgment are being
made under s. 103. It is, in substance, a debt collection mechanism. Since
the parties conceded that the judgment debt in this appeal is a claim provable
in bankruptcy, I would add that the purpose and effect of s. 102, in the
context of this appeal, are to suspend a debtor’s driving privileges until
payment of a provable claim.
[48]
Alberta disputes this. It submits that s. 102
is not, in substance, a debt enforcement scheme. It contends that the
provision merely imposes an additional monetary condition to obtain the
privilege of driving. In the appellant’s view, this condition mirrors the
amount of the judgment debt because it reflects the actual regulatory cost of
the driver’s failure to comply with the insurance requirement. Alberta
maintains that the “payment obligation is inherently regulatory in nature” and
that repayment of the judgment debt “is merely incidental to the satisfaction
of the regulatory requirement” (A.F., at para. 31). It insists that the
purpose of the provision is to discourage people from driving without
insurance.
[49]
I disagree. While it is plausible that s. 102
might discourage drivers from driving uninsured, this is neither its main
purpose nor its main effect. For one, the deterrent effect of s. 102, if any,
is not tied to the failure to maintain proper insurance. The deterrent effect
materializes only if the uninsured driver causes an accident. The accident
must also cause injury to a third party. In addition, the victim must seek
damages and obtain a judgment. Yet this is still not sufficient. The
uninsured driver must also be incapable of satisfying the judgment in question
or refuse to do so. Clearly, it is the failure to pay the judgment debt that
triggers s. 102, not the failure to be insured. Furthermore, failure to comply
with the insurance requirement is already subject to a penalty under s. 54 of
the TSA. In sharp contrast to s. 102, s. 54 imposes a monetary penalty
(and, in case of default, imprisonment) for the mere failure to comply with the
insurance requirement, without more.
[50]
The distinction Alberta attempts to make between
a judgment debt and a regulatory charge is also irrelevant for two reasons.
First, s. 102 is clearly aimed at the repayment of a judgment debt. Second,
even if it were aimed at recovering the resulting regulatory charge, such a
charge would nonetheless be a claim provable in bankruptcy, and as such, it
would remain a debt subject to the bankruptcy process.
[51]
On the first point, the language of the
provision is clear: its objective is the satisfaction of the judgment debt.
Section 102 is triggered when the judgment debtor “fails . . . to satisfy
the judgment”: s. 102(1). It provides that driving privileges will be
suspended “until the judgment is satisfied or discharged”: s. 102(2).
Section 103 is also informative; the suspension of driving privileges stops as
soon as payments are being made. The suspension resumes, however, when the
debtor defaults.
[52]
The letters received by the respondent are
telling in this regard. On October 27, 2011, the Director, Driver Fitness and
Monitoring, wrote this:
This
letter will serve as notification that due to your unsatisfied motor vehicle
accident claim, your operator’s licence and vehicle registration privileges
will be suspended indefinitely . . . .
.
. . the suspension will remain in effect until the following
condition(s) are met:
- satisfy any outstanding Motor Vehicle Accident Claims
Fund claim. [Emphasis added; A.R., at p. 48.]
On November 15, 2011,
Motor Vehicle Accident Recoveries added this:
. . . I advise that your
client, Joseph William Moloney, remains indebted for the judgment debt
obtained against him. Section 102(2) of the Traffic Safety Act (copy
attached) states that he remains indebted “until the judgment is satisfied
or discharged, otherwise than by a discharge in bankruptcy”.
Accordingly, we would request
that your client contact our office to make payment arrangements
suitable to his circumstances. Failure to do so will result in the continued
suspension of his driving privileges. [Emphasis added; A.R., at p. 49.]
These letters make no
mention of the respondent’s failure to comply with the insurance requirement,
or of the accident for which he is responsible.
[53]
In addition, as I mentioned, s. 102 could be
used in favour of a third party victim who obtains a judgment but chooses not
to seek compensation from the Administrator under the MVACA. In such a
case, there is no “regulatory cost”, since no public funds are being spent.
The only effect of s. 102 is to deprive the debtor of driving privileges until
he or she pays the judgment creditor.
[54]
With respect to the second point, even if we
were to accept the distinction advocated by Alberta between the judgment debt
and the resulting regulatory charge, it has no practical implication. A
regulatory charge remains a debt owed to the province, which s. 102 is meant to
collect. Not only is it a debt, but it is, like the underlying judgment debt,
a provable claim.
[55]
According to s. 121(1) of the BIA , a
provable claim must meet three criteria: (1) there must be a debt, liability or
obligation owed to a creditor, (2) which was incurred before the debtor became
bankrupt, and (3) it must be possible to attach a monetary value to the debt,
liability or obligation (Newfoundland and Labrador v. AbitibiBowater Inc.,
2012 SCC 67, [2012] 3 S.C.R. 443, at para. 26). Even if the judgment debt were
characterized as a regulatory charge, it would meet these criteria. The
regulatory charge would arise from a payment made to the victim of an accident
caused by the respondent. The respondent’s liability to the province arose
prior to his assignment in bankruptcy, and it is clearly monetary in nature.
As a result, the province’s claim for the regulatory charge would be provable
in bankruptcy and must be treated as part of the bankruptcy process: AbitibiBowater,
at para. 40; Vachon, at p. 426; Ontario (Minister of Finance) v.
Clarke, 2013 ONSC 1920, 115 O.R. (3d) 33, at para. 52.
[56]
Therefore, whether one considers the province’s
claim as a judgment debt or as the resulting regulatory charge, it is still
provable in bankruptcy. It follows that the effect of s. 102 is to allow a
judgment creditor to deprive the debtor of his or her driving privileges until
the debt is paid. In the end, the provision thus compels the payment of a
provable claim. Driving is unlike other activities. For many, it is necessary
to function meaningfully in society. As such, driving often cannot be seen as
a genuine “choice”: R. v. White, [1999] 2 S.C.R. 417, at para. 55. The
effect of the provincial scheme undoubtedly amounts to coercion in that regard.
[57]
Before leaving this provincial scheme to
consider whether the enforcement mechanism conflicts with the BIA , I
briefly discuss an argument raised solely by the intervener Superintendent of
Bankruptcy on the validity of one component of s. 102(2) of the TSA.
The impugned provision states that the suspension of driving privileges
continues “until the judgment is satisfied or discharged, otherwise than by
a discharge in bankruptcy”. While the parties have conceded the validity of
the provision, the Superintendent of Bankruptcy, who is also the appellant in
the companion appeal, 407 ETR Concession Co. v. Canada (Superintendent of
Bankruptcy), 2015 SCC 52, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 397, argued before us that
the words “otherwise than by a discharge in bankruptcy” are ultra vires the
province and, as a result, severable. In his view, this “phrase is invalid
since the Province attempts to explicitly render a discharge in bankruptcy
ineffective as against a provincial debt that Parliament has not exempted from
the effects of bankruptcy” (factum, at para. 11).
[58]
As stated previously, neither the parties nor
the courts below disputed that s. 102, as a whole, is intra vires the
province. The dominant purpose and effect of s. 102 are to suspend driving
privileges until payment of a judgment debt. This enforcement scheme is part
of the provincial regulation of driving privileges in Alberta. There is no
doubt that assuring the financial responsibility of drivers and regulating
driving privileges fall within the province’s jurisdiction regarding property
and civil rights under s. 92(13) of the Constitution Act, 1867 . Given
this and the way the case has been argued and decided, this
appeal is, in my view, properly disposed of by applying the doctrine of
paramountcy and ascertaining whether a conflict exists between the BIA
and the TSA.
[59]
Whether the provincial scheme has the effect of
rendering a discharge in bankruptcy “ineffective as against a provincial debt”
or negating the operability of a federal law as the Superintendent of
Bankruptcy argues (factum, at paras. 11-12) is better resolved as a question of
paramountcy. I would add that the words “otherwise
than by a discharge in bankruptcy” are necessary only because the province
lists the discharge in general, in addition to the satisfaction of the debt, as
an event ending the suspension of the privilege. Had the legislation defined
the satisfaction of the debt as the sole event capable of ending the
suspension, the dominant feature of the provision would remain the same,
although the issue of conflict with a discharge in bankruptcy would still
arise.
(2)
The Conflict Between the BIA and the TSA
(a)
Operational Conflict
[60]
The Court of Appeal concluded that there was no
operational conflict, although it used that term throughout its judgment in
reference to conflict generally. It explained that the respondent could resist
the payment by foregoing his driving privileges and choosing not to drive
(para. 10). The reasons of the Court of Appeal, as well as the submissions of
the parties, save for those of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy, relate almost
exclusively to the second branch of the applicable test. I believe the Court
of Appeal and the parties are mistaken on this point. I therefore respectfully
disagree with my colleague Côté J., who holds in her concurring reasons that
there is no operational conflict, since a bankrupt “can either opt not to drive
or voluntarily pay the discharged debt” (para. 123). In a case like this one,
the test for operational conflict cannot be limited to asking whether the
respondent can comply with both laws by renouncing the protection afforded to
him or her under the federal law or the privilege he or she is otherwise
entitled to under the provincial law. In that regard, the debtor’s response to
the suspension of his or her driving privileges is not determinative. In
analyzing the operational conflict at issue in this case, we cannot disregard
the fact that whether the debtor pays or not, the province, as a creditor, is
still compelling payment of a provable claim that has been released, which is
in direct contradiction with s. 178(2) of the BIA :
If [the respondent] pays the
debt, then the provincial law will have required him to pay a debt that has
been released by the federal law. If [he] does not pay the debt, then the
provincial law will have punished him — by withholding his driver’s licence —
for failing to pay a debt that has been released by the federal law.
(Gorguis v. Saskatchewan Government Insurance, 2011 SKQB 132,
372 Sask. R. 152, at para. 25; sent back for rehearing by the Saskatchewan
Court of Appeal, which did not address the court’s comments on this point (2013
SKCA 32, 414 Sask. R. 5).)
Thus, the laws at issue
give inconsistent answers to the question whether there is an enforceable
obligation: one law says yes and the other says no.
[61]
On the one hand, s. 178(2) of the BIA
provides that “an order of discharge releases the bankrupt from all claims
provable in bankruptcy”. In my view, it is undisputed that a discharge under
s. 178 of the BIA releases a debtor, thus preventing creditors from
enforcing claims that are provable in bankruptcy. My colleague appears to
suggest (at para. 96) that, since the actual words of the section say “nothing
more” than that the bankrupt is discharged, or since the discharge merely
releases provable claims, an interpretation to the effect that the release of
such claims means that they cannot be enforced would “add words to the
provision”. With respect, this amounts to depriving the words of s. 178(2) of
their obvious and ordinary meaning. In Schreyer, LeBel J. wrote that, “[a]s is clear from the words of s. 178(2) BIA , the discharge
operates to release the bankrupt from all claims provable in bankruptcy”. He
added that, “[f]or creditors, the discharge means that they ‘cease to be able
to enforce claims against the bankrupt that are provable in bankruptcy’” (para.
21). I know of no authority that suggests that the words “order of discharge”
or “releases” in that context mean anything other than that the provable claim
is unenforceable. To give the words used in s. 178(2) their proper meaning is
not to interpret the provision broadly.
[62]
On the other hand, s. 102(2) of the TSA
empowers the province to continue to pressure a debtor by withholding his or
her driving privileges “until the judgment is satisfied or discharged,
otherwise than by a discharge in bankruptcy”. As I mentioned above in my
analysis of the legislative schemes, the language of this provision is clear:
it provides for the satisfaction of the judgment debt by excluding the impact
of a discharge in bankruptcy.
[63]
One law consequently provides for the release of
all claims provable in bankruptcy and prohibits creditors from enforcing them,
while the other disregards this release and allows for the use of a debt
enforcement mechanism on such a claim by precisely excluding a discharge in
bankruptcy. This is a true incompatibility. Both laws cannot operate
concurrently (Sun Indalex, at para. 60; Lafarge, at para.
82; M & D Farm, at para. 41; Multiple Access, at p. 191),
“apply concurrently” (Western Bank, at para. 72) or “operate side by
side without conflict” (Marine Services, at para. 76). The facts of this
appeal indeed show an actual conflict in operation of the two provisions. This
is a case where the provincial law says “yes” (“Alberta can enforce this
provable claim”), while the federal law says “no” (“Alberta cannot enforce this
provable claim”). The provincial law gives the province a right that the
federal law denies, and maintains a liability from which the debtor has been
released under the federal law. This conflict can hardly be characterized as
“indirect” as my colleague suggests (paras. 92 and 128). Nor can I
characterize as merely “implicit” the clear prohibition in s. 178(2) against
enforcing provable claims that have been discharged. It is not in dispute that
s. 178(2) is a prohibitive provision; considering the meaning of the words
“order of discharge” and “releases”, what the provision “exactly” prohibits is
the enforcement of discharged provable claims. There is no other “possible
ramification” in terms of what this section prohibits.
[64]
There was indeed much discussion about the
effect of a discharge in the parties’ submissions. To avoid a finding of
conflict, Alberta submitted that in bankruptcy, the debt is not extinguished
but merely “released”. It asserted that the BIA precludes only the
“civil enforcement” of the debt through “civil process”; it does not affect the
province’s ability to insist on licensing requirements.
[65]
In Schreyer, LeBel J. described the
effect of discharge. While recognizing that the debt is not extinguished, he explained
that a discharge prevents creditors from enforcing those claims that are
provable in bankruptcy:
. .
. every claim is swept into the bankruptcy and . . . the bankrupt is released
from all of them upon being discharged unless the law sets out a clear
exclusion or exemption. . . .
The
only reservation I have with the decision of the Court of Appeal in the case at
bar relates to its numerous statements that the operation of s. 178(2) BIA
has the effect of “extinguishing” the equalization claim. With respect, this
provision does not purport to extinguish claims that are provable in bankruptcy
pursuant to s. 121 BIA , but “releases” the debtor from such claims: see,
on this point, Re Kryspin (1983), 40 O.R. (2d) 424 (H.C.J.), at pp.
438-39; and Ross, Re (2003), 50 C.B.R. (4th) 274 (Ont. S.C.J.), at para.
15. As is clear from the words of s. 178(2) BIA , the discharge operates
to release the bankrupt from all claims provable in bankruptcy. For creditors,
the discharge means that they “cease to be able to enforce claims against the
bankrupt that are provable in bankruptcy”. [Emphasis added; paras 20-21.]
(Citing Houlden, Morawetz and Sarra, at p. 6-283.)
[66]
This description is consistent with the term
“releases” found in s. 178(2) , which means “[l]iberation from an
obligation, duty, or demand; the act of giving up a right or claim to the
person against whom it could have been enforced”: Black’s Law Dictionary
(10th ed. 2014), at p. 1480. As a result of s. 178(2) , creditors are deemed to
give up their right to enforce their provable claims. The verb “enforce”, as
used by LeBel J. and Houlden, Morawetz and Sarra, means “to compel obedience”: Black’s
Law Dictionary, at p. 645. The non-extinguishment of the debt may be
relevant in some cases, such as those involving the liability of a third party
(see Buchanan v. Superline Fuels Inc., 2007 NSCA 68, 255 N.S.R. (2d)
286; Miller, Re (2001), 27 C.B.R. (4th) 107 (Ont. S.C.J.)). This is,
however, of no practical relevance to this appeal. Section 178(2) is clear: a
creditor cannot compel the debtor to pay a debt that was released on discharge.
[67]
In this appeal, the payment which the province
seeks to recover is a provable claim. In substance, the purpose and effect of
s. 102 are to compel payment of that provable claim. That claim was properly
released, since neither the province’s judgment debt, nor the resulting
regulatory charge, is exempt from discharge under s. 178(1) . As a provable
claim is subject to s. 178(2) , the province is precluded from compelling
payment of the judgment debt.
[68]
Contrary to the appellant’s contention, nothing
suggests that s. 178(2) merely precludes civil enforcement of provable
claims. Accepting the appellant’s argument would amount to adding words to the
provision that do not exist, and that the legislator did not include. While
being expressly precluded from compelling payment of a discharged provable
claim, the province could create an administrative scheme that had the effect
of coercing a discharged debtor to pay a debt that has been released. The
appellant’s argument must be rejected. Pursuant to s. 178(2) of the BIA ,
creditors are precluded from compelling payment of a claim provable in
bankruptcy, through either civil or administrative processes.
[69]
Neither can the question under the operational
conflict branch of the paramountcy test be whether it is possible to refrain
from applying the provincial law in order to avoid the alleged conflict with
the federal law. To argue that the province is not required to use s. 102 in
the context of bankruptcy, or that it can choose not to withhold the
respondent’s driving privileges, leads to a superficial application of the
operational conflict test. To suggest that a conflict can be avoided by
complying with the federal law to the exclusion of the provincial law cannot be
a valid answer to the question whether there is “actual conflict in operation”,
as the majority of the Court put it in Multiple Access: see also COPA,
at para. 64. To so conclude would render the first branch of the paramountcy test
meaningless, since it is virtually always possible to avoid the application of
a provincial law so as not to cause a conflict with a federal law.
Furthermore, any provincial law that could survive the first branch under the
latter argument would necessarily also survive the second branch. If it is
possible to avoid operational conflict simply by declining to apply the
provincial law, the same could be done to avoid any frustration of the federal
purpose under the second branch.
[70]
In fact, this would be tantamount to rendering
the provincial law inoperative to the extent of the conflict even before a
conflict is found. Under the doctrine of paramountcy, this is precisely the
remedy that courts grant once a conflict is found; it is not a tool courts can use
to avoid finding a conflict. The remedy of not applying the provincial law
cannot be determinative of whether a conflict exists in the first place. In
this case, whether or not the province has discretion not to apply s. 102 is
irrelevant: see Lafarge, at para. 75. The province chose to take
advantage of the scheme. The question is whether it can do so while also
complying with the BIA .
[71]
This view, with which my colleague disagrees,
appears to me to be consistent with this Court’s jurisprudence on operational
conflict. For instance, in M & D Farm, the creditor held a mortgage
on the debtors’ family farm. After defaulting on the mortgage, the debtors
obtained a stay of proceedings under the federal Farm Debt Review Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. 25 (2nd Supp.). While the stay was still in effect, the
creditor sought, and was granted, leave under the provincial Family Farm
Protection Act, C.C.S.M., c. F15, which authorized the immediate
commencement of foreclosure proceedings. The question arose as to whether there
was a conflict between the federal stay and the provincial leave. The Court
concluded that there was an operational conflict (pp. 982-85), and this
conclusion was later reaffirmed in Lafarge, at para. 82, and again in Lemare
Lake, at para. 18. As I read M & D Farm, the fact that the
debtors could choose to voluntarily pay the mortgage debt, as my colleague
suggests, did not mean that there was no operational conflict. Nor was conflict
avoided because the creditor could have chosen not to seek leave to commence
foreclosure proceedings. There was an operational conflict because the
provincial law expressly authorized the very proceedings that the federal stay
precluded.
[72]
More recently, in Sun Indalex, Deschamps
J., with Moldaver J. concurring, found that there was an operational conflict
(the Court was unanimous on this point). On the one hand, there was an order
made under the federal Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. C-36 , which authorized an insolvent company to obtain
debtor-in-possession (“DIP”) financing and granted priority to the DIP lender.
On the other hand, the provincial Personal Property Security Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. P.10, gave priority to the administrator of the company’s employee
pension plans: para. 60. Deschamps J. did not avoid the operational conflict by
concluding, for instance, that the debtor could have chosen not to seek DIP
financing in the first place.
[73]
My analysis does not “expan[d] the definition of
conflict in the first branch” of the paramountcy test, nor does it “conflat[e]”
its two branches, contrary to what my colleague indicates (paras. 93 and 106).
In my view, this analysis instead applies the principles developed by this
Court on federal paramountcy to the operational conflict situation at issue
here, where the federal law includes a prohibition that the provincial law
effectively disregards. I discuss the two legislative schemes separately from
the application of the two branches of the paramountcy test. My analysis of the
operational conflict focuses on the existence of an actual and direct conflict
between the provisions at issue. The two branches are not “conflated” simply
because, in a situation like the current one, the wording of s. 178(2) and the
clear prohibition it contains happen to exemplify the goal behind the provision
and one of the key objectives of the BIA , that is, the financial
rehabilitation of the debtor. I consider that my colleague’s remarks to the
effect that impossibility of dual compliance is a “secondary consideration” in
my discussion of operational conflict (para. 99) are misplaced as well. The
classic statement of the test for operational conflict in Multiple Access
that she cites with approval (para. 100) is precisely the one I am relying upon
here. It is in light of that statement that I find there is no real possibility
of dual compliance as understood by this Court. Indeed, the opposite
conclusion would depend on a creditor refusing to apply (or a debtor refusing
to comply with) the provincial law, or, alternatively, on a debtor renouncing
(or a creditor refusing to comply with) the protection afforded by the federal
law. To find a possibility of dual compliance with the conflicting laws at
issue — on the basis of hypotheticals that call for “single” compliance, by any
one of the actors involved, with one law but not with the other — would be
inconsistent with this Court’s precedents on federal paramountcy.
[74]
In this regard, this case is distinguishable
from precedents like Rothmans and COPA, on which my colleague
relies. Those cases both dealt with provincial laws that took a more
restrictive approach to matters covered by permissive federal laws. In each of
them, the relevant statutes were held not to create an operational conflict. In
COPA, the federal Aeronautics Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. A-2 , allowed
private citizens to build airports, while the provincial Act respecting the
preservation of agricultural land and agricultural activities, R.S.Q.,
c. P‑41.1, prohibited such activities on agricultural land absent an
administrative authorization: para. 8. In Rothmans, s. 30 of the federal
Tobacco Act, S.C. 1997, c. 13 , permitted the display of
tobacco products at retail, while the provincial Tobacco Control Act,
S.S. 2001, c. T‑14.1, banned the advertising, display and promotion
of tobacco products in places where persons under 18 years of age were allowed.
Rothmans and COPA
did not involve a direct contradiction between the two
applicable laws as does the instant case. They merely involved one law that
imposed stricter conditions in allowing activities that were also permitted by
the government at the other level. In the case at bar, the question with
respect to operational conflict is whether debts incurred while driving
uninsured can be enforced even though the debtor has been discharged from
bankruptcy. On this question, the two laws directly contradict each other.
[75]
I therefore conclude that s. 102 of the TSA
allows the province, or a third party creditor, to enforce a provable claim
that has been released. To that extent, it conflicts with s. 178(2) of the BIA .
It is impossible for the province to apply s. 102 without contravening s.
178(2) and, as a result, for the respondent to simultaneously be liable to pay
the judgment debt under the provincial scheme and be released from that same
claim pursuant to s. 178(2) : Lafarge, at para. 82; M & D Farm,
at para. 41. Section 178 is a complete code in that it sets out which debts are
released on discharge and which debts survive bankruptcy. In effect, s. 102
creates a new class of exempt debts that is not listed in s. 178(1) . Hence, in
the words used by my colleague in her reasons (paras. 95, 110 and 128), “the
provincial law allows the very same thing” — the enforcement of a debt released
under s. 178(2) of the BIA — that “the federal law prohibits”. The
result is an operational conflict between the provincial and federal
provisions.
[76]
Although this conclusion makes it unnecessary to
discuss the second branch of the test, I will nonetheless address it in order
to respond to the province’s arguments.
(b)
Frustration of Federal Purpose
(i)
Financial Rehabilitation
[77]
Like the lower courts, I find that the
province’s use of its administrative powers relating to driving privileges to
burden the respondent until he repays a discharged debt frustrates the
financial rehabilitation of the bankrupt. The effect of s. 102 directly
contradicts and defeats the purpose of the discharge provided for in
s. 178(2) :
The
BIA permits an honest but unfortunate debtor to obtain a discharge from
debts subject to reasonable conditions. The Act is designed to permit a
bankrupt to receive, after a specified period a complete discharge of all his
or her debts in order that he or she may be able to integrate into the
business life of the country as a useful citizen free from the crushing burden
of debts . . . . [Emphasis added.]
(Houlden,
Morawetz and Sarra, at p. 1-2.1)
As explained already, the
language of s. 178(2) makes it clear that the purpose of this provision is to
give effect to one of the goals underlying the BIA regime — the
financial rehabilitation of the debtor — by releasing “the bankrupt from all
claims provable in bankruptcy”. In other words, s. 178(2) is aimed precisely
at providing the bankrupt with a fresh start. The facts of this case establish
that the province’s use of s. 102 despite the respondent’s discharge undermines
this purpose.
[78]
The respondent was a truck driver. In 1996,
after the accident, the province was assigned the judgment rendered against him
in the amount of $194,875. In 2008, after attempting to pay the debt in
instalments for about 12 years, he made an assignment in bankruptcy. At that
time, the outstanding amount of the debt had increased to $195,823; it was, by
far, the largest of the respondent’s financial liabilities. In 12 years, the
respondent had not been able to keep up with his interest payments. The
crushing burden of the province’s claim against him was the main reason for his
bankruptcy. In 2012, at the time his application for discharge was heard, the
respondent had only managed to pay the judgment debt down to $192,103.79. By
the effect of s. 102, he was exiting bankruptcy while carrying the same
financial burden that had caused his bankruptcy four years earlier. If s. 102
is allowed to operate despite the respondent’s discharge, the respondent is not
offered the opportunity to rehabilitate that Parliament intended to give him.
This is particularly compelling in the respondent’s case. As a truck driver,
his ability to gain a livelihood is tied to his ability to drive. But more
generally, inability to drive can constitute a significant impediment to any
person’s capacity to earn income: see Lucar, Re (2001), 32 C.B.R. (4th)
270 (Ont. S.C.J.), at paras. 22-23.
[79]
In furthering financial rehabilitation,
Parliament expressly selected which debts survive bankruptcy and which are
discharged: s. 178(1) and (2) . It did so having regard to competing policy
objectives. This is a delicate exercise, because the more claims that survive
bankruptcy, the more difficult it becomes for a debtor to rehabilitate: AbitibiBowater,
at para. 35; Schreyer, at para. 19. In 1970, the Study Committee on
Bankruptcy and Insolvency Legislation emphasized this concern:
. .
. much of the rehabilitative effect of his discharge and release from debts is
lost, when a bankrupt is left with substantial debts after his discharge.
Indeed, in some cases, it may almost be regarded as a mockery of the bankruptcy
system to take all of the sizable property of a debtor, distribute it among the
creditors and then leave the debtor to cope with some of his largest creditors
from whose debts he has not been released.
(Bankruptcy and Insolvency: Report of the
Study Committee on Bankruptcy and Insolvency Legislation (1970), at
para. 3.2.085)
When operating in the
context of bankruptcy, s. 102 undermines this balancing exercise and imperils
the bankrupt’s ability to rehabilitate. In effect, s. 102 creates a new
class of debts that survive bankruptcy. As such, it leaves the debtor with a
substantial financial liability that was not contemplated by Parliament. Had
Parliament intended judgment debts arising from motor vehicle accidents, or the
resulting regulatory charges, to survive bankruptcy, it would have stated so
expressly in s. 178(1) of the BIA . It did not. Together, s.
178(1) and (2) are comprehensive. It is beyond the province’s constitutional
authority to interfere with Parliament’s discretion in that regard.
[80]
Notwithstanding this, Alberta asserts that, like
any creditor, the province is allowed to form a new binding contract with the
discharged bankrupt for the repayment of the debt. In its view, the
respondent’s driving privileges can serve as fresh consideration for such a
contract. I disagree. Like the Court of Appeal, I conclude that this alleged
fresh consideration is neither genuine nor consistent with the purpose of s.
178(2).
[81]
As a general rule, a creditor cannot cause a
debtor to revive an obligation from which the debtor was released, unless the
creditor offers fresh consideration: Wood, at p. 301. Between private parties,
it is arguable that a debtor may freely agree to revive a discharged debt in
exchange for the creditor’s provision of goods or services. The province,
however, is unlike any private creditor. While a private creditor is under no
obligation to provide goods or services, the province cannot withhold the
respondent’s driving privileges arbitrarily. Suspension of privileges by
administrative bodies must be based on a legal rule: see Roncarelli v.
Duplessis, [1959] S.C.R. 121, at pp. 141-42; British Columbia v.
Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd., 2005 SCC 49, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 473, at para.
59; Secession Reference, at para. 71; Reference re Remuneration of
Judges of the Provincial Court of Prince Edward Island, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 3,
at para. 10. In the case at bar, the effect and purpose of s. 102 are to
compel payment of a discharged debt, which conflicts with s. 178(2). As a
result, s. 102 is, to that extent, inoperative and cannot ground the province’s
authority to withhold the respondent’s privileges. If those privileges are
being suspended on the sole basis that the respondent refuses to satisfy a
judgment debt that was released in bankruptcy, the province is acting without
authority. The province’s promise to refrain from doing what it has no
authority to do cannot constitute fresh consideration capable of supporting any
contract. This includes a contract for the repayment of a discharged debt.
More importantly, the respondent need not enter into such a contract in order
to recover his driving privileges, because the province has no authority to
withhold them.
[82]
Finally, Alberta’s other assertion, to the
effect that Parliament’s power over bankruptcy and insolvency matters does not
extend to the regulation of driving privileges, does not entail that the
province can withhold those privileges on the basis of an unpaid released
debt. In my view, the province is conflating the scope of Parliament’s
authority and the consequences of the conflict between the BIA and the TSA.
The financial responsibility of drivers is a valid matter of provincial concern
and jurisdiction, and the province can set the conditions for driving
privileges with this consideration in mind. Nonetheless, when the province
denies a person’s driving privileges on the sole basis that he or she refuses
to pay a debt that was discharged in bankruptcy, the province’s condition
conflicts with s. 178(2) of the BIA and is, to that extent,
inoperative. To so conclude does not transfer the power to regulate driving
privileges to Parliament. The obligation to grant those privileges flows from
the provisions of the provincial law that remain operative.
[83]
The rehabilitative purpose of s. 178(2) is not
meant to give debtors a fresh start in all aspects of their lives. Bankruptcy
does not purport to erase all the consequences of a bankrupt’s past conduct.
However, by ensuring that all provable claims are treated as part of the
bankruptcy regime, the BIA gives debtors an opportunity to rehabilitate
themselves financially. While this does not amount to erasing all regulatory
consequences of their past conduct, it is certainly meant to free them from the
financial burden of past indebtedness.
(ii)
Equitable Distribution
[84]
The Court of Appeal concluded that the TSA
also disrupts the equitable distribution purpose of the BIA . In that
court’s view, the province’s legislative scheme allows it to obtain more than
the ordinary dividend paid under the bankruptcy regime, which is contrary to
the objective of the BIA to “treat all creditors of the same class
equally” (para. 50). For its part, the province asserts that s. 102 does not
alter the priorities set out in the BIA , since payment for the privilege
of driving does not draw on the estate of the bankrupt that is available to
other creditors.
[85]
I disagree with this conclusion of the Court of
Appeal. The purpose of s. 178 , the only provision of the BIA that
is at issue in this appeal, is to give the discharged bankrupt a fresh start.
The section sets out the limits of this fresh start by excluding specific debts
from being released by the order of discharge (s. 178(1) ), and it provides for
the consequences of that order by releasing the bankrupt from all other
provable claims (s. 178(2) ). Section 178 does not further the purpose of
equitable distribution of assets. What the Court of Appeal points to are the
consequences of survival of the judgment debt as a result of s. 102 of the TSA,
despite the discharge contemplated in s. 178 . This concerns the financial
rehabilitation purpose of the BIA and nothing more.
[86]
This Court has repeatedly cautioned against
giving “too broad a scope to paramountcy on the basis of frustration of federal
purpose”: Lemare Lake, at para. 23, quoting Marcotte, at para.
72; Marine Services, at para. 69; Western Bank, at para. 74. In
the federal paramountcy analysis, it is therefore always essential to ascertain
the exact purpose of the specific provision of the federal law that is at
issue. The Court of Appeal does not cite any authority supporting the
assertion that s. 178 has purposes other than the debtor’s financial
rehabilitation. Although other provisions of the BIA , discussed earlier
in these reasons and dealing mostly with the property of the bankrupt and the
administration of the bankrupt’s estate, are meant to ensure this equitable
distribution purpose, those provisions are not at issue in the case at bar. At
best, the assertion made by the Court of Appeal unduly broadens the BIA ’s
equitable distribution purpose and the related single proceeding model. This is
contrary to the presumption of constitutionality
according to which, “[w]hen a federal statute can be properly interpreted so as
not to interfere with a provincial statute, such an interpretation is to be
applied in preference to another applicable construction which would bring
about a conflict between the two statutes”: Western Bank, at
para. 75, quoting Law Society of B.C., at p. 356; Marine
Services, at para. 69.
[87]
Professor Wood, at p. 3, explains as follows the
rationale behind the collective proceeding through which equitable distribution
is achieved:
The
race to grab assets in the absence of a collective insolvency regime does not
provide an environment within which an efficient and orderly liquidation can
occur. The process is inefficient because each creditor must separately attempt
to enforce their claims against the debtor’s assets, and this produces
duplication in enforcement costs. The piecemeal selling off of assets also
results in a much smaller recovery than if a single person were in control of
the liquidation. Similarly, the race to seize assets does not produce an
environment within which negotiations with creditors can easily occur. A
reasonable creditor who is inclined to negotiate with the debtor will be
unlikely to do so if other creditors are actively taking steps to make away
with the debtor’s realizable assets; instead, the creditor will feel compelled
to join the wild dash to seize assets. Although some of the creditors (those
who are able to strike first) are better off in such a scenario, the creditors
as a group receive less than if a more orderly liquidation or negotiated
arrangement had taken place.
(See
also Husky Oil, at para. 7.)
[88]
The single proceeding model is focused on
ensuring the orderly distribution of assets and reducing inefficiencies, and
ultimately on maximizing global recovery for creditors. If, after the
bankrupt’s discharge, that is, after the administration of the estate
and the orderly distribution contemplated by the BIA , the province is
allowed to compel a bankrupt to make payments outside the collective proceeding
and to obtain property that would not, in any event, be distributed to the
creditors as part of the bankruptcy process, I fail to see how the single
proceeding model is disrupted. The assets to be distributed to creditors
remain the same, and they are still allocated according to the bankruptcy
scheme and any priorities it dictates. Whether or not s. 102 of the TSA
operates after the discharge does not impact the orderly distribution to
creditors, nor does it affect the pool of assets to be distributed to them. In
this regard, the judgment debt is not “preferred” or given any kind of priority
under the BIA scheme; it is quite simply unaffected by the bankruptcy
process as a result of the provincial scheme in the same way as the other debts
listed in s. 178(1) that are not released by the order of discharge. The
operation of s. 102 does not cause any chaos or inefficiencies in the
bankruptcy process. If anything, allowing s. 102 to operate increases global
recovery for the other creditors while leaving the single proceeding intact.
[89]
Thus, although it is clear that the purpose of
s. 178(2) is to ensure the debtor’s financial rehabilitation and that s.
102 frustrates that purpose, I am not convinced that the operation of the
provincial scheme in the context of this appeal interferes with the equitable
distribution of assets, a purpose that is undoubtedly served by other
provisions of the BIA , but not by s. 178 .
VI.
Disposition
[90]
In my view, the doctrine of paramountcy dictates
that s. 102 of the TSA is inoperative to the extent that it conflicts
with the BIA , and in particular s. 178(2) . Therefore, the province
cannot withhold the respondent’s driving privileges on the basis of an
unsatisfied but discharged judgment debt. I would dismiss the appeal with
costs and answer the constitutional question as follows:
Is s.
102(2) of the Alberta Traffic Safety Act, R.S.A. 2000, c. T-6,
constitutionally inoperative by reason of the doctrine of federal paramountcy?
Answer: Yes, s. 102 of the Alberta Traffic Safety Act is
inoperative to the extent that it is used to enforce a debt discharged in
bankruptcy.
The reasons of McLachlin C.J.
and Côté J. were delivered by
[91]
Côté J. — I agree that what is at the core of this
appeal is the frustration of a federal purpose. Therefore, I concur with Gascon
J. insofar as he finds that s. 102 of the Alberta Traffic Safety Act,
R.S.A. 2000, c. T-6 (“TSA”), frustrates the purpose of financial
rehabilitation that underlies s. 178(2) of the federal Bankruptcy and
Insolvency Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. B-3 (“BIA ”), and that s. 102 is
accordingly inoperative to the extent of the conflict by reason of the doctrine
of federal paramountcy. However, I do not believe that there is an operational
conflict to speak of in this appeal.
[92]
There is no doubt in my mind that s. 102 of the TSA
allows Alberta to do indirectly what it is implicitly prohibited from doing
under s. 178(2) of the BIA , but in light of the indirect nature of the
conflict, this issue is properly dealt with on the basis of the second branch
of the federal paramountcy test, not the first.
[93]
In my respectful view, Gascon J.’s analysis
contrasts with the clear standard that has been adopted for the purpose of
determining whether an operational conflict exists in the context of the
federal paramountcy test: impossibility of dual compliance as a result of an
express conflict. My colleague’s approach conflates the two branches of the
federal paramountcy test, or at a minimum blurs the difference between them and
returns the jurisprudence to the state it was at before the second branch was
recognized as a separate branch. And it has an additional serious adverse effect:
by expanding the definition of conflict in the first branch, it increases the
number of situations in which a federal law might be found to pre-empt a
provincial law without an in-depth analysis of Parliament’s intent.
[94]
To support his approach, my colleague relies on
cases that were decided before “frustration of purpose” was recognized as a
separate branch of the test. He also relies on subsequent decisions in which
the two branches were confused. In my view, M & D Farm Ltd. v. Manitoba
Agricultural Credit Corp., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 961 (“M & D Farm”),
and British Columbia (Attorney General) v. Lafarge Canada Inc., 2007 SCC
23, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 86 (“Lafarge”), cannot be found to represent a
consistent and coherent approach to the interplay between the two branches.
[95]
In the case at bar, it is clear from the
provisions themselves that as a result of how the two legislatures decided to
exercise their respective powers, dual compliance is not impossible. The
provincial and federal provisions at issue do not expressly conflict; they are
different in terms of their contents and of the remedies that they provide. One
of them does not permit what the other specifically prohibits.
[96]
Under s. 178 of the BIA , a bankrupt is
discharged from all claims provable in bankruptcy. That section says nothing
more. One must be careful, in light of the federal purpose of financial
rehabilitation, not to add words to the provision.
[97]
Thus, s. 102 of the TSA does not revive
an extinguished claim per se; if a debtor chooses not to
drive, the province simply cannot enforce its claim. Rather, s. 102 allows
the province to suspend a driver’s licence, which gives it some leverage to
compel payment of the debt if the driver decides to drive. The bankrupt
is still discharged in the literal sense of the words of s. 178(2) of the BIA .
This is not a situation of express conflict in which one law says “yes” while
the other says “no”. The two statutes answer different questions. In the end,
the literal requirement of the federal statute is, strictly speaking, met. It
therefore follows that the two acts can operate side by side without conflict.
To conclude otherwise would be to disregard the distinct contents of the two
provisions and the remedies that they provide.
[98]
This is why I am of the view that this appeal
must be decided on the basis of the frustration of a federal purpose, an issue
in respect of which the applicable standard is higher, and that requires an
in-depth analysis of Parliament’s intent.
VII.
Impossibility of Dual Compliance
[99]
In my colleague’s discussion of operational
conflict, impossibility of dual compliance, instead of being at the
forefront of the analysis, seems to be a secondary consideration. Yet it is the
undisputed standard for determining whether an operational conflict exists, and
one that very few cases will meet.
[100]
In the jurisprudence, impossibility of dual
compliance has become synonymous with operational conflict: see e.g. P. W.
Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada (5th ed. Supp.), at p. 16-4
(“Impossibility of dual compliance”). This may largely be due to this Court’s
repeated emphasis on the definition of operational conflict articulated by
Dickson J. (as he then was) in Multiple Access Ltd. v. McCutcheon,
[1982] 2 S.C.R. 161 (“Multiple Access”): “. . . there is actual conflict
in operation . . . where one enactment says ‘yes’ and the other says ‘no’;
‘the same citizens are being told to do inconsistent things’; compliance
with one is defiance of the other” (p. 191 (emphasis added)).
[101]
In Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. v.
Saskatchewan, 2005 SCC 13, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 188 (“Rothmans”), Major
J. stressed that Multiple Access is “often cited for the proposition
that there is an inconsistency for the purposes of the doctrine if it is
impossible to comply simultaneously with both provincial and federal
enactments” (para. 11). Major J. also described an operational conflict as
a situation in which the provincial law “mak[es] it impossible to comply” with
the federal law (para. 14). Binnie and LeBel JJ. would subsequently state
in Canadian Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007 SCC 22, [2007] 2
S.C.R. 3, that provincial and federal laws are incompatible where “it is
impossible to comply with both laws” (para. 75). Impossibility of dual
compliance continues to be the standard for conceptualizing operational
conflict and determining whether one exists: see e.g. Quebec (Attorney
General) v. Canadian Owners and Pilots Association, 2010 SCC 39, [2010] 2
S.C.R. 536 (“COPA”), at para. 64.
[102]
The requirement of an “express contradiction”,
discussed in 114957 Canada Ltée (Spraytech, Société d’arrosage) v. Hudson
(Town), 2001 SCC 40, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 241 (“Spraytech”), at para. 34,
is inseparable from impossibility of dual compliance as a clear expression of
the prudent measure of restraint displayed in the line of cases in which the
first branch of the federal paramountcy test was developed. It echoes the
proposition that for the two laws to conflict, each one has to say exactly the
opposite of what the other says (one law says “yes” and the other says “no”). A
less direct conflict is simply not enough.
[103]
In Canadian Western Bank, Bastarache J.
indicated that the only type of conflict capable of triggering the first branch
is one that is “express” (para. 126). See also Lafarge, at para. 113. In
M & D Farm, on which my colleague relies extensively, Binnie J.,
writing for the Court, acknowledged that the federal enactment will prevail
only in the event of “an express contradiction” (para. 17). The Court had also
previously used the expression “direct conflict” to characterize this
requirement: Rio Hotel Ltd. v. New Brunswick (Liquor Licensing Board),
[1987] 2 S.C.R. 59, at pp. 64-65. Peter W. Hogg states that the
requirement is “a very tight restriction on the paramountcy doctrine, since
cases where the provincial law expressly contradicts the federal law are
few and far between”: “Paramountcy and Tobacco” (2006), 34 S.C.L.R. (2d)
335, at p. 338 (emphasis added). In the absence of an express conflict, the two
provisions are deemed to be capable of operating side by side. This idea also
underlies the reasons of the majority in COPA, who found that there was
no operational conflict, because the federal statute did not require the
construction of an aerodrome, whereas the provincial law prohibited it (para.
65).
[104]
In light of the modern jurisprudence, this
restrained approach to operational conflict is therefore inescapable. There are
good reasons for maintaining such a strict standard for operational conflict.
Iacobucci J. (dissenting, but not on this point) explained the rationale behind
it in Husky Oil Operations Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1995]
3 S.C.R. 453:
In closing, although I find there to be no conflict between
s. 133(1) and the Bankruptcy Act, I posit that, even if there were
to be some element of conflict, this must be evaluated in light of the fact
that the provincial legislation is intra vires. Legislation that is intra vires is permitted to have an
incidental and ancillary effect on a federal sphere. I would emphasize again
that this Court has traditionally declined to invoke the paramountcy doctrine
in the absence of actual operational conflict. I am uncomfortable with the
“water-tight” approach to federal bankruptcy legislation propounded by the respondents.
To interpret the quartet as requiring the invalidation of provincial laws
which have any effect on the bankruptcy process is to undermine the theory of
co-operative federalism upon which (particularly post-war) Canada has been
built. In Deloitte Haskins [and Sells Ltd. v. Workers’
Compensation Board, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 785], at pp. 807-8, Wilson J.
recognized it to be appropriate to adopt as narrow a definition of operational
conflict as possible in order to allow each level of government as much area of
activity as possible within its respective sphere of authority. [Emphasis added; para. 162.]
Such a high standard is
consistent with co-operative federalism and with the idea, as eloquently
expressed by my colleague Abella J. for the majority in NIL/TU,O Child and
Family Services Society v. B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union,
2010 SCC 45, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 696, that “[t]oday’s constitutional landscape is
painted with the brush of co-operative federalism”, which requires that courts
accept an overlap “between the exercise of federal and provincial competencies”
as inevitable (para. 42). If, in practice, the wording of the statutes makes it
possible to comply with both of them, then co-operative federalism requires
this Court to find that the federal and provincial statutes are compatible, at
least at the first stage of the analysis. If there is a doubt in this regard,
the issue should be addressed at the second stage, since an interpretation of
the federal and provincial legislation that results in a finding of
compatibility should be favoured at the first stage.
[105]
This is where I cannot agree with my colleague.
Rather than assessing the possibility of dual compliance and the existence or
absence of an express operational conflict, Gascon J. begins by characterizing
the effect of s. 102 of the TSA. In his view, that effect is to
permit the enforcement of a discharged debt. He then finds that compelling the
payment of such a debt is prohibited by s. 178(2) of the BIA , as
its purpose is to give the bankrupt a fresh start. My colleague interprets s.
178(2) of the BIA broadly on the basis of Parliament’s intent to foster
the financial rehabilitation of the bankrupt, and this results in a conflict.
In other words, rather than considering whether to comply with one statute is
to defy the other, he considers whether the effects of the provincial statute
seem to be incompatible with the federal prohibition. Instead of considering
only the actual words of both provisions, he takes into account their purposes
and their effects.
[106]
As I mentioned above, his analysis thus
conflates the two branches of the federal paramountcy test, or at a minimum
blurs the difference between them and returns the jurisprudence to the state it
was at before the second branch was recognized as a separate branch.
[107]
With all due respect, as the Chief Justice
stated in COPA, the two branches of the modern federal paramountcy test
relate to “two different forms of conflict” (para. 64). See also Marine
Services International Ltd. v. Ryan Estate, 2013 SCC 44, [2013] 3
S.C.R. 53 (“Marine Services”), at para. 68. While it is true that
they overlap, it is not true that a finding of an operational conflict in the
first branch will necessarily entail a finding of frustration of a federal
purpose in the second branch. An overlap between the two forms of conflict does
not mean the branches are necessarily redundant. The party that invokes the
frustration of a federal purpose bears the burden of proof, and the standard of
proof is high: COPA, at para. 66. The federal scheme may be drafted in a
manner that does not match the record of Parliament’s intent, but that results
in an express conflict with a provincial law. If the frustration of a federal
purpose can be used to find that an operational conflict exists, there is
really no point in having two branches of the test. If the Court wishes to
merge the two branches, it cannot do so without overruling Rothmans,
COPA and Marine Services on this point.
[108]
The first branch of the federal paramountcy test
is concerned with incompatibility of the provisions, that is, an
incompatibility that is evident on the face of the provisions themselves. An
analysis in this regard takes the federal statute as a starting point and
focusses on its actual wording. This analysis requires an inquiry, based on the
wording of the federal statute, into whether there is room for the provincial
law to operate. In this context, the content of each of the laws and the
remedies that they provide are of considerable importance.
[109]
For all these reasons, even a superficial
possibility of dual compliance will suffice for a court to conclude that there
is no operational conflict: Law Society of British Columbia v. Mangat,
2001 SCC 67, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 113 (“Mangat”), at para. 72. By the
same logic, a duplication of federal and provincial legislation will not on its
own amount to operational conflict: Multiple Access, at p. 190, per
Dickson J. for the majority. In addition, where federal legislation is broad
and permissive, a restrictive provincial scheme will usually be deemed not to
conflict with it, because it will be possible to comply with both of them by
conforming to the more restrictive provincial law: Quebec (Attorney General)
v. Canada (Human Resources and Social Development), 2011 SCC 60, [2011] 3
S.C.R. 635, at para. 20. Such was the case in Bank of Montreal v. Hall,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 121 (“Bank of Montreal”), Spraytech,
Rothmans and COPA.
[110]
If the federal law is prohibitive, as in the
case at bar, the question becomes what exactly it prohibits. If the
provincial law allows the very same thing the federal law prohibits, there is
an operational conflict. If it does not do so, the analysis shifts to the
second branch.
[111]
My colleague contends, relying on Marine
Services, that the modern approach to statutory interpretation applies to
ambiguous federal statutes. According to him, the analysis regarding an express
conflict cannot be limited to a literal reading of the statute. Parliament’s
intent can thus be used to find that an operational conflict exists where there
would otherwise be none.
[112]
With all due respect, Marine
Services does not stand for that proposition; rather, it reaffirms the
idea that co-operative federalism supports an interpretation of the federal and
provincial legislation that results in a finding of compatibility at the first
stage of the test. In Marine Services, this Court resolved the ambiguity
in the Marine Liability Act, S.C. 2001, c. 6 , by finding that “[a]n
interpretation recognizing the absence of conflict between the statutes is
borne out by the broader context, the scheme and object of the MLA and
Parliament’s intent” (para. 79). Yet Gascon J. is doing the opposite, that is,
concluding that an operational conflict exists even though there is an
interpretation of the two laws that results in a finding of compatibility.
[113]
If permissive federal legislation is to be
interpreted restrictively in order to avoid an operational conflict, I see no
reason to generally treat ambiguous provisions differently. Following my
colleague’s approach, the frustration of federal purpose analysis can result in
findings of two different forms of conflict. That is clearly not the conclusion
this Court reached in Bank of Montreal. It should be
noted that the federal provision at issue in that case could easily have been
characterized as being ambiguous. Thus, a broader interpretation could have
been adopted to the effect that Parliament’s intent resulted in an operational
conflict; instead, the Court considered it necessary to extend the federal paramountcy
test by creating the frustration of purpose branch. Whereas Parliament’s intent
had originally been irrelevant to the federal paramountcy test, it would now be
the touchstone of this new branch.
[114]
The Court has never really addressed the
interrelation between the two branches. In many cases from both before and
after Rothmans, Canadian Western Bank and COPA, it seems
to me that the two branches have been confused, as the Court has concluded that
there was an operational conflict in the context of the first branch while
referring to the federal purpose.
[115]
For instance, Gonthier J., writing for the
majority in Husky Oil, found that there was a “clear operational
conflict in that ss. 133(1) and (3) in their operation together entail a
reordering or subverting of the federal order of priorities under the Bankruptcy
Act” (para. 87). As the Ontario Court of Appeal noted in its reasons in the
companion case, Canada (Superintendent of Bankruptcy) v. 407 ETR Concession
Company Ltd., 2013 ONCA 769, 118 O.R. (3d) 161, the decision of the
majority in Husky Oil is best understood as one involving frustration of
federal purpose rather than operational conflict:
Although
not so described in the case, in my view, the majority in Husky Oil is
best understood as a decision involving frustration of a federal purpose rather
than an operational conflict. Firstly, the majority did not rely on Multiple
Access but on Hall, a case which is now viewed as a frustration of
purpose decision. Secondly, the majority relied on the effect of the
provincial legislation and indirect conflict to ground its paramountcy analysis
and not the strict operational conflict test found in Multiple Access.
[para. 75]
[116]
In Lafarge, the majority did recognize
the two branches of the federal paramountcy test, but stated the test
incorrectly:
We
restated the requirements for federal paramountcy in our reasons in Canadian
Western Bank. The party raising the issue must establish
the existence of valid federal and provincial laws and the impossibility of
their simultaneous application by reason of an operational conflict or because
such application would frustrate the purpose of the enactment, as explained by
our Court in Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. v. Saskatchewan, [2005]
1 S.C.R. 188, 2005 SCC 13, at paras. 11-14. (See also Law Society of British
Columbia v. Mangat, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 113, 2001 SCC 67, at paras. 68‑71;
Bank of Montreal v. Hall, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 121.) [para. 77]
[117]
The conflation of frustration of a purpose with impossibility
of dual compliance is even more apparent at para. 75 of that case, where the
majority stated that the two statutes “would create an operational conflict
that would flout the federal purpose”. Interestingly, the majority did not
refer to an operational conflict in terms of impossibility of dual compliance
or a situation in which one enactment says “yes” and the other says “no”. They
merely applied M & D Farm and found that there was an operational
conflict, just as my colleague proposes to do in the case at bar. In my
opinion, Lafarge should also be understood as a decision involving the
frustration of a federal purpose rather than an operational conflict.
[118]
Although M & D Farm was decided on
the basis of an operational conflict, it is not helpful authority on the modern
doctrine of federal paramountcy either, as Binnie J. made no distinction
between the first and second branches of the federal paramountcy test. At the
time that case was decided, the concept of frustration of purpose had been referred
to in Bank of Montreal, but this Court had not yet explicitly recognized
the two branches of the federal paramountcy test. Although the Court found in M
& D Farm that there was an operational conflict, in doing so it relied
on passages from Bank of Montreal in which La Forest J. had inquired
into whether “requir[ing] the bank to defer to the provincial legislation is to
displace the legislative intent of Parliament” (Bank of Montreal, at
p. 153; see M & D Farm, at para. 41). I agree that there was in
fact an operational conflict in M & D Farm, but for different
reasons, as I will explain below.
[119]
Finally, in Mangat, the federal legislation (Immigration Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. I-2) permitted non-lawyers to appear on behalf of clients
before the Immigration and Refugee Board (ss. 30 and 69(1)). The provincial
legislation (Legal Profession Act, S.B.C. 1987, c. 25) prohibited
non-lawyers from practising law. As defined in s. 1 of the Legal Profession
Act, the expression “practice of law” included “appearing as counsel or
advocate” in the expectation of a fee. Mr. Mangat was an immigration
consultant. The Law Society of British Columbia applied for a permanent
injunction to prevent him from practising law. The Court found the law to be
inoperative, but used the term “operational conflict” in respect of both
branches of the paramountcy test:
In this case,
there is an operational conflict as the provincial legislation prohibits
non-lawyers to appear for a fee before a tribunal but the federal legislation
authorizes non-lawyers to appear as counsel for a fee. At a
superficial level, a person who seeks to comply with both enactments can
succeed either by becoming a member in good standing of the Law Society of
British Columbia or by not charging a fee. Complying with the
stricter statute necessarily involves complying with the other statute.
However, following the expanded interpretation given in cases like M & D
Farm and Bank of Montreal, supra, dual compliance is
impossible. . . .
This case
should be distinguished from 114957 Canada Ltée (Spraytech, Société
d’arrosage) v. Hudson (Town), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 241, 2001 SCC 40. In
that case, it was possible to comply with the federal, provincial, and
municipal statutes or regulations without defeating Parliament’s purpose.
As previously shown, in this case, it is impossible to comply with the
provincial statute without frustrating Parliament’s purpose. [Emphasis added;
paras. 72-73.]
[120]
In my view, the Court actually found in that case that there was no
operational conflict (as that concept is understood today), as it noted in the
above passage that the statutes at issue allowed dual compliance at a
“superficial level”; the words “superficial level” corresponded to the
operational conflict branch. And it then found that dual compliance was not
possible on the basis of an “expanded interpretation”, citing M & D Farm
and Bank of Montreal; the words “expanded interpretation” referred to
the frustration of purpose branch.
[121]
In light of the above cases, I find it difficult to conclude, as my
colleague urges me to do, that the approach taken by this Court on this issue
has been entirely consistent.
[122]
Although this Court’s past decisions are not
always helpful when it comes to drawing a distinction between the two branches,
they do support three propositions: (1) that the applicable standard for the
first branch is impossibility of dual compliance caused by an express
conflict, (2) that this is a high standard that should be applied with
restraint, and only in very few cases, and (3) that the two branches are
distinct and address different forms of conflict.
[123]
Consequently, I find that the analysis at the
first stage should really be as simple as the Alberta Court of Appeal put it,
and it is no surprise to me that both parties made next to no submissions on
the point. The determining question is whether the province’s legislation
provides a path on which dual compliance is possible. Because such a path
exists in this case as a result of the wording of the two provisions, dual
compliance cannot be found to be impossible. Unlike in M & D Farm,
the two statutes in the instant case have different contents and provide for
different remedies. Since the bankrupt is under no compulsion
in this regard, he or she can either opt not to drive or voluntarily pay the
discharged debt, in which case there will be no operational conflict between
the provincial and federal laws. The only thing Alberta can do is suspend a
bankrupt’s driver’s licence.
[124]
It is important to note that although
operational conflict and frustration of purpose are described as two “branches”
of a single test, either one is sufficient to trigger the application of the
doctrine of federal paramountcy. Where enactments are found to be in
operational conflict, the inquiry can end there without further investigation
into the purposes of the enactments. A high standard at the first stage merely
means that in most cases, the purpose and effects of the legislation at issue
will need to be analyzed at the second stage.
[125]
Requiring courts to deal with the issue in the
second branch has many advantages. For the frustration of purpose analysis, the
federal legislative intent with which the provincial law is alleged to be
incompatible must be established by the party relying on it. Clear proof of
intent is required. The party must first establish the purpose of the relevant
federal statute and then prove that the provincial law is incompatible with or
frustrates this purpose: COPA, at para. 66.
[126]
In the second branch, the court can proceed with
a careful analysis of Parliament’s intent and, if possible, interpret the
federal law so as not to interfere with the provincial law: Canadian
Western Bank, at para. 75. Before concluding that the provincial law is
inoperative, the court can also consider whether the federal government
supports the operation of that law. In Rothmans, this Court emphasized
that in resolving federalism issues, a court must bear in mind the position of
the government at the other level (para. 26). In that case, the federal
government intervened in favour of the provincial law, arguing that it had been
enacted for the same health-related purpose as the federal law. The Court found
that there was no frustration of purpose.
[127]
Considering that the doctrine of federal
paramountcy operates at the expense of provincial jurisdiction and reduces
legislative overlap, these principles encourage governments at both levels to
take the lead in defining the scope of their legislative powers. They
facilitate intergovernmental dialogue and serve as safeguards of provincial
autonomy. In my view, the approach I suggest is more consistent with the
principle of co-operative federalism as applied in Canadian Western Bank.
It also sets a clear precedent by reaffirming that a provincial law will rarely
be found to be inoperative in the first branch of the analysis.
[128]
My colleague concludes that this approach would
render the first branch of the federal paramountcy test meaningless; in his
opinion, it is virtually always possible to avoid the application of a
provincial law so as not to cause a conflict with a federal law. I disagree
that the “impossibility” standard, if applied strictly, would render the first
branch of the federal paramountcy test meaningless. If the provincial law allows
or requires something that the federal law explicitly prohibits, or
if the conflict is direct rather than indirect, there will be an operational
conflict. But that is just not the case here. In fact, the effect of my
colleague’s approach is to render the second branch meaningless, since a
frustration of federal purpose analysis can now be used to interpret federal
statutes broadly in order to find that an operational conflict exists where
there would otherwise be none.
[129]
Following my approach, one would still find that there
was an operational conflict in M & D Farm, in which the federal law
imposed an absolute stay of proceedings on the very procedures the provincial
statute allowed to commence or to continue. In that case, the express
requirement of the federal statute was in direct conflict with the provincial
law. On the one hand, the federal Farm Debt Review Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.
25 (2nd Supp.), permitted a farmer to obtain a stay of a creditor’s proceedings
and required the creditor, before demanding payment, to give notice that it
intended to commence foreclosure proceedings. On the other hand, under the
provincial statute, the creditor could obtain an order authorizing the
immediate commencement of such proceedings. Unlike in the case at bar,
the two statutes had similar contents and provided for similar remedies: both
dealt specifically with the process for realizing on farmers’ debts, and both
established procedures for commencing or continuing proceedings against
farmers.
[130]
The approach I suggest would also result in a
finding that there was an operational conflict in Sun Indalex Finance, LLC
v. United Steelworkers, 2013 SCC 6, [2013] 1 S.C.R. 271, in which
the federal statute, the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. C-36 , gave a court the power to order that a security or charge rank
in priority over the claim of any secured creditor of the company,
whereas the provincial statute created a priority in favour of the
administrator of the company’s employee pension plan. The federal legislation
was not only permissive, but granted the court a very specific power; the
provincial legislature was left little leeway to interfere with this power.
Because the provincial statute provided, on a mandatory basis, for a different
order of priority, it was impossible to comply with both laws without rendering
the court’s power under the federal statute meaningless.
[131]
I would add that what is “virtually always
possible”, as my colleague puts it, at para. 69, is to find some
conflict in the application of two laws. This is why the case law requires
something more, namely impossibility of dual compliance and an express
conflict. It is also why the focus is on the wording of the federal statute and
not on its every possible ramification.
[132]
In the end, the issue in this case is whether
the effect of the province withholding driving privileges in this manner
produces a conflict with the purposes of the BIA , thereby accomplishing
indirectly what the province cannot do directly. Thus, it is on the basis of
the second branch of the federal paramountcy test, not the first, that this
appeal must be decided.
[133]
I adopt my colleague’s analysis and conclusion
on this point. As the frustration of one federal purpose is sufficient to
trigger the application of the doctrine of federal paramountcy, I need not
address the second proposed ground for frustration of purpose, that of
equitable distribution.
Appeal
dismissed with costs.
Solicitor for the
appellant: Attorney General of Alberta, Edmonton.
Solicitors for the
respondent: Bow Valley Counsel, Canmore, Alberta.
Solicitor for the
intervener the Attorney General of Ontario: Attorney General of Ontario,
Toronto.
Solicitor for the
intervener the Attorney General of Quebec: Attorney General of Quebec,
Sainte‑Foy.
Solicitor for the
intervener the Attorney General of British Columbia: Attorney General of
British Columbia, Victoria.
Solicitor for the
intervener the Attorney General for Saskatchewan: Attorney General for
Saskatchewan, Regina.
Solicitor for the
intervener the Superintendent of Bankruptcy: Attorney General of Canada,
Toronto.