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T-1029-76
Clifford Burnell (Plaintiff)
v.
The International Joint Commission (Defendant)
Trial Division, Thurlow A.C.J.—Ottawa, June 22 and July 9, 1976.
Jurisdiction—Plaintiff claiming defendant manipulated and allowed others to manipulate water levels in St. Lawrence River in breach of s. 4 of International Boundary Waters Treaty Act—Plaintiff seeking damages for alleged flooding— Defendant applying to strike statement of claim under Rule 419(1)(a) for lack of jurisdiction claiming plaintiff misinter preted Act, and that it is a judicial tribunal and neither a person nor a suable entity, and that s. 4 of the Act creates no obligations or rights in an injured party against it—Federal Court Rule 419(1)(a)—International Boundary Waters Treaty Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-20, ss. 2-5.
Plaintiff sought damages from defendant arising from alleged flooding of his property, claiming that defendant was an agent of the Crown and had acquired the right to maintain the water level in the St. Lawrence River, and that it had manipu lated and allowed others to manipulate the level and was in breach of section 4 of the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act. Defendant applied to strike the statement of claim under Rule 419(1)(a) for lack of jurisdiction, claiming the plaintiffs interpretation of the Act, particularly section 4, was misconceived, and that defendant was a judicial tribunal and was neither a person nor a suable entity and that section 4 creates no obligation or right in respect of which an injured party can pursue an action against it. Plaintiff's position was that while the statement of claim referred only to section 4, the Court, under section 5, has jurisdiction to enforce any right arising under the Act and that plaintiff was entitled to amend so as to claim under section 3, by which the same right is conferred on â property owner injured in Canada to sue the Commission, as a party causing damage in Canada, as is conferred by section 4 on an owner injured in the United States, and that the Commission is a suable person, and the person referred to in section 5.
Held, the action is dismissed. Section 4 is limited to injury in the U.S. and can afford no basis for this action. Paragraph 2 of the statement of claim, dealing with section 4, is struck out; it is for the Trial Judge to decide whether the claim was one that arises under the Act so as to bring it within the section 5 jurisdiction, or simply one arguable only in a provincial court.
While it is doubtful whether the objection that the Commis sion is not a person or party suable in this Court falls under Rule 419(1)(a), the matter should be dealt with under the Court's inherent jurisdiction respecting its own process to put
an end to a null or invalid proceeding. While it is not a question here of a dead or non-existent defendant, the same principle applies where the sole defendant named is neither a natural person nor a body recognized by law as having a distinct legal personality, nor a body empowered by statute with capacity to sue or be sued. Defendant's functions are advisory and quasi- judicial. Neither the Act not the Treaty establishes it as a body corporate, nor do they give it capacity to sue or be sued. And they do not imply that the High Contracting Parties so intend ed. This was not a case of misnomer, nor can the action be regarded as having been intended as an action against the individual Commissioners personally, or be so treated. How ever, if the action was misconceived, so also were the accept ance of service, application for leave to enter a conditional appearance, such appearance and the motion to strike out.
Lazard Brothers & Co. v. Midland Bank [1931] 1 K.B. 617; [1933] A.C. 289, applied. Hollinger Bus Lines Lim ited v. Ontario Labour Relations Board [1952] O.R. 366, agreed with.
ACTION. COUNSEL:
F. J. McDonald and C. A. Murphy for plaintiff.
G. Henderson, Q.C., and E. Binavince for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Hewitt, Hewitt, Nesbitt, Reid, McDonald & Tierney, Ottawa, for plaintiff.
Gowling and Henderson, Ottawa, for defendant.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
THURLOW A.C.J.: In this proceeding, which was begun on March 17, 1976, by the filing of a statement of claim, the plaintiff seeks damages arising from the alleged flooding of his property on Renshaw Island in the St. Lawrence River by the raising of the water level of the river. The island is said to be located in the Province of Ontario and between the water control dam at Long Sault, Ontario, and the Beauharnois power house and Coteau control dam in the Province of Quebec.
In paragraph 2 of the statement of claim it is alleged that:
2. The Defendant is an agent of Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada, and pursuant to the terms of the Defendant's enabling legislation and the International Boundary Waters Treaty it acquired the right to maintain the water levels in all navigable channels in the St. Lawrence River including the channel depths to provide for adequate navigation through the St. Lawrence Seaway system. The Defendant controls the level of the water in the St. Lawrence Seaway system between the port of Montreal and Lake Erie. The Defendant has manipulat ed the water levels in the St. Lawrence River or it allowed others to manipulate the level and it therefore is in breach of Section 4 of the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act, R.S.C. 1970, Chapter I-20 and the schedule thereto.
and in paragraphs 6, 7 and 8 it is said that:
6. The Plaintiff says and the fact is that the building and appurtenances thereto were damaged beyond repair as a result of the flooding on the property hereinbefore described and he has lost the enjoyment of the lands as a direct result of the Defendant's manipulation of the water levels in the St. Law- rence River. The Plaintiff says and the fact is that the Defend ant raised the water levels in the St. Lawrence System to enable the ships using the system to carry more tonnage. When the water levels began to rise the Plaintiff notified the Defend ant of the damage that was being caused but the Defendant failed to take any remedial actions to prevent the damage or to stop the manipulation of the water levels which were causing the damage.
7. The Plaintiff says and the fact is that his riparian rights have been damaged as above described as a direct result of the Defendant's breach of the provisions of the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act, R.S.C. 1970, Chapter I-20 and the schedule thereto.
8. The Plaintiff says that the Defendant has caused a continu ing nuisance which led directly to the damage hereinbefore described and which prevents the Plaintiff from using the demised land for the purposes intended.
On June 3, 1976, solicitors claiming to act for the defendant, after accepting service of the state ment of claim, sought and obtained leave to enter a conditional appearance for the purpose of object ing to the jurisdiction of the Court. Such an appearance was in fact entered the same day.
On June 22, 1976, the present application was made, purportedly under Rule 419(1)(a), to dis miss the action on the ground that the Court does not have jurisdiction to entertain it against the defendant. Rule 419(1)(a) provides that:
Rule 419. (1) The Court may at any stage of an action order any pleading or anything in any pleading to be struck out, with or without leave to amend, on the ground that
(a) it discloses no reasonable cause of action or defence, as the case may be,
Under Rule 419(2) no evidence is admissible on such an application.
The submission put forward on behalf of the defendant was that the action is misconceived both as to the interpretation of the Act referred to in paragraph 2 of the statement of claim and, in particular, section 4 of that Act, and as to the nature of the defendant Commission, that the Commission is a judicial tribunal and is neither a person nor a suable entity and that section 4 of the Act creates no obligation or right in respect of which an injured person can pursue an action against the Commission.
The plaintiff's position, as I understood it, was that the responsibility for the raising of the water level is that of the Commission, that while para graph 2 of the statement of claim refers only to section 4 of the Act the Court, under section 5, has jurisdiction to enforce any right arising under the Act, that the plaintiff is entitled to amend so as to claim under section 3, by which the same right is conferred on a property owner injured in Canada to sue the Commission, as a party causing damage in this country, as is conferred by section 4 on an owner injured on the United States side, and that the Commission is a person capable of being sued and is the person referred to in section 5.
The sections to which reference have been made, together with section 2, read as follows:
2. The treaty relating to the boundary waters and to ques tions arising along the boundary between Canada and the United States made between His Majesty, King Edward VII, and the United States, signed at Washington on the 11th day of January 1909, and the protocol of the 5th day of May 1910, in the schedule, are hereby confirmed and sanctioned. 1911, c. 28, s. 1.
3. The laws of Canada and of the provinces are hereby amended and altered so as to permit, authorize and sanction - the performance of the obligations undertaken by His Majesty in and under the treaty; and so as to sanction, confer and impose the various rights, duties and disabilities intended by the treaty to be conferred or imposed or to exist within Canada. 1911, c. 28, s. 2.
4. Any interference with or diversion from their natural channel of any waters in Canada, which in their natural channels would flow across the boundary between Canada and the United States or into boundary waters (as defined in the treaty) resulting in any injury on the United States side of the boundary, gives the same rights and entitles the injured parties to the same legal remedies as if such injury took place in that part of Canada where such diversion or interference occurs, but this section does not apply to cases existing on the 11th day of January 1909 or to cases expressly covered by special agree-
ment between Her Majesty and the Government of the United States. 1911, c. 28, s. 3.
5. The Federal Court of Canada has jurisdiction at the suit of any injured party or person claiming under this Act in all cases in which it is sought to enforce or determine as against any person any right or obligation arising or claimed under or by virtue of this Act. 1911, c. 28, s. 4.
It appears to me to be clear that as section 4 is limited to injury on the United States side of the border it can afford no basis for the present action. On the other hand, it is not clear that no arguable case could be made out on a cause of action based on section 3 and failure by the Commission to observe the requirement of the second last para graph of Article VIII of the Treaty'. Accordingly, in so far as the matter would fall to be determined on Rule 419(1)(a), I would strike out paragraph 2 of the statement of claim as disclosing no reason able cause of action but I would leave the rest of the statement of claim and what liability might be established thereon to the trial judge to decide after the facts had been explored. I would also leave it to him to decide, after determining the facts and the basis of any liability, whether the claim was one that arises under the Act so as to bring it within the jurisdiction conferred on this Court by section 5 or is simply one that arises under the common law of Ontario and is cogniz- able only in a provincial court.
This, however, does not conclude the matter for there is still the objection that the Commission is not a person or party that can be sued in this Court. I doubt very much that such an objection falls under Rule 419(1)(a). But it appears to me that if it is sound, if it can be said that there is no defendant capable of being sued and of defending itself, the matter can and should be dealt with, under the inherent jurisdiction of the Court with
' In cases involving the elevation of the natural level of waters on either side of the line as a result of the construction or maintenance on the other side of remedial or protective works or dams or other obstructions in boundary waters or in waters flowing therefrom or in waters below the boundary in rivers flowing across the boundary, the Commission shall require, as a condition of its approval thereof, that suitable and adequate provision, approved by it, be made for the protection and indemnity of all interests on the other side of the line which may be injured thereby.
respect to its own process, to put an end to a null or invalid proceeding, whether on the Court's own motion, on the relation of an amicus curiae, or otherwise. See Lazard Brothers & Co. v. Midland Bank 2 .
In that case in the Court of Appeal Scrutton L.J. said at page 624:
One of the vital points in this case is whether there was, in October or November, 1930, any existing juristic person known as the Banque Industrielle de Moscou or the Russian equivalent of that name, on whom a writ or notice of a writ could be served, or against whom judgment in default of appearance could be given. I am aware that in Jacques v. Harrison ((1884) 12 Q.B.D. 165) the Court of Appeal has decided that if a person injuriously affected by a judgment by default and not a party to that action desires to set aside the judgment, he must apply either in the defendant's name, if he is entitled to use it, or in his own name, by a summons served both on the plaintiff and the defendant, to have it set aside. But I am aware of no case, and counsel could not refer me to one, when this has been applied to the case of a non-existent person, or defendant, on whom no summons can be served. Indeed, in my opinion, if it comes to the knowledge of the Court that it has entered judgment in default of appearance against a man who was at the time dead, or a company which was at the time dissolved, or non-existent according to the law of its country of origin, the Court is bound, after hearing the parties interested, of its own motion to set the judgment aside. Such a judgment is null and void: see Simmons v. Liberal Opinion ([1911] 1 K.B. 966) (non-existent company); Tetlow v. Orela ([1920] 2 Ch. 24) (plaintiff dead at time of writ); also the observations of Lord Parker in Daimler Co. v. Continental Tyre and Rubber Co. (Great Britain) ([1916] 2 A.C. 307, 337), referred to by Viscount Cave in Russian Commercial and Industrial Bank v. Comptoir d'Escompte de Mulhouse ([1925] A.C. 112, 130): "But when the Court in the course of an action becomes aware that the plaintiff is incapable of giving any retainer at all, it ought not to allow the action to proceed."
In the House of Lords 3 the principle was stated thus by Lord Wright at page 296:
I shall deal first with question (2.), which is most important and is decisive, since it is clear law, scarcely needing any express authority, that a judgment must be set aside and declared a nullity by the Court in the exercise of its inherent jurisdiction if and as soon as it appears to the Court that the person named as the judgment debtor was at all material times at the date of writ and subsequently non-existent: such a case is a fortiori than the case which Lord Parker referred to in Daimler Co. v. Continental Tyre, &c., Co. ([1916] 2 A.C. 307, 337). There the directors, being all alien enemies, could not give a retainer. Lord Parker said: "But when the Court in the course of an action becomes aware that the plaintiff is incapable of
2 [1931] 1 K.B. 617.
3 [1933] A.C. 289.
giving any retainer at all, it ought not to allow the action to proceed." In such a case the plaintiff cannot be before the Court. In the present case if the defendants cannot be before the Court, because there is in law no such person, I think by parity of reasoning the Court must refuse to treat these pro ceedings as other than a nullity. English‘Courts have long since recognized as juristic persons corporations established by for eign law in virtue of the fact of their creation and continuance under and by that law. Such recognition is said to be by the comity of nations. Thus in Henriques v. Dutch West India Co. ((1728) 2 Ld. Raym. 1532, 1535) the Dutch company were permitted to sue in the King's Bench on evidence being given "of the proper instruments whereby by the law of Holland they were effectually created a corporation there." But as the crea tion depends on the act of the foreign state which created them, the annulment of the act of creation by the same power will involve the dissolution and non-existence of the corporation in the eyes of English law. The will of the sovereign authority which created it can also destroy it. English law will equally recognize the one, as the other, fact.
The present instance is not one of a dead or non-existent defendant in quite the same sense but it appears to me that the same principle applies where the sole defendant named in the proceeding is neither a natural person nor a body recognized by the law as having a legal personality of its own, separate and distinct from that of its members, nor a body endowed by statute, whether expressly or impliedly, with capacity to sue or be sued in its own name.
In Hollinger Bus Lines Limited v. Ontario Labour Relations Board 4 , Roach J.A. speaking for the Ontario Court of Appeal discussed the ques tion as follows at page 376:
Although that ground was not contained in the particulars furnished, and even though it may not have been, and likely was not, argued before Spence J., this Court should take notice of it proprio motu if this Court should reach the conclusion after argument that the defendant is not a suable entity: Society Brand Clothes Ltd. v. Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America et al., [1931] S.C.R. 321, per Cannon J. at p. 326, [1931] 3 D.L.R. 361.
As Meredith C.J., pointed out in The Metallic Roofing Company of Canada v. The Local Union No. 30, Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' International Association et al. (1903), 5 O.L.R. 424, affirmed 9 O.L.R. 171: "A corporation or an individual or individuals were the only entities known to the common law who could sue or be sued; to these have been added, by the Judicature Act and rules, iwo or more persons claiming or being liable as partners, who, if carrying on busi ness in Ontario, may sue and be sued in the name of the firm of
4 [1952] O.R. 366.
which they were co-partners at the time of the accruing of the cause of action, and any person—that is, a single individual— whether residing within or without Ontario, carrying on busi ness within Ontario in a name or style other than his own name, who may be sued in such name or style. It is competent, however, to the legislature to give to an association of individu als which is neither a corporation, nor a partnership, nor an individual, a capacity for owning property and acting by agents; and such capacity, in the absence of express enactment to the contrary, involves the necessary correlative of liability to the extent of such property for the acts and defaults of such agents: per Farwell J., whose judgment was approved and adopted by the House of Lords, in Taff Vale R.W. Co. v. Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, [1901] A.C. 426, at p. 429 .... "
The defendant is not any one of those entities. Plainly, it is not an individual. There are individuals who are members of the Board but the Board itself is a single entity. Plainly, too, the members of the Board are not partners or persons carrying on business in a name other than their own. Neither is the defendant a corporation. The statute creating it, most signifi cantly, does not declare it to be a corporation. There are Boards which are the creatures of the legislature, some of which, by the statutes creating them, are corporations, and some of which are not. For example, the Workmen's Compensation Board, by the statute creating it, is a body corporate; the Ontario Municipal Board is not.
There are cases in which it has been held that, notwithstand ing the fact that the Act creating a body did not expressly declare it to be a body corporate, that body, as a necessary intendment from the enactment creating it, was liable to be sued and had capacity to sue. Such a case is Bank of Montreal v. Bole, [1931] 1 W.W.R. 203, in which it was held that the Liquor Board of Saskatchewan had capacity to sue or be sued even though the Act which created it did not expressly declare it to be a body corporate.
The International Joint Commission consists of six members established as a Commission under the Treaty referred to in the statute. Three of the members are appointed by the President of the United States and three by the Governor in Coun cil. Under Article VIII of the Treaty the Commis sion has jurisdiction over and the authority to pass upon cases involving the use or obstruction or diversion of waters with respect to which under other articles of the Treaty the approval of the Commission is required and certain rules and prin ciples to be followed by the Commission are pre scribed including that to which reference has already been made. A majority of the Commission is empowered to render a decision. If the Commis sion is evenly divided, separate reports are to be made by the Commissioners on each side to their governments and, after consultation and agree-
ment between the governments, the matter may be referred back to the Commission for decision. It is thus, in my opinion, a body the functions of which are advisory and quasi-judicial in character.
Nowhere in the statute or the Treaty is it estab lished as a body corporate. Nowhere in the statute or the Treaty is capacity expressly conferred on it to sue or be sued.
The Commission has authority to employ engi neers and clerical assistants but it is not authorized to acquire property or to execute works. Under the Treaty the salaries and expenses of the Commis sion and of the secretaries of the United States and Canadian sections are to be paid by their respec tive governments and the joint expenses incurred by it are to be paid in equal moieties by the High Contracting Parties. In my opinion on the statute and the Treaty there is no basis for implying that it was intended by the High Contracting Parties that the Commission should have capacity to sue or be sued in the courts of either country and there is no foundation for the plaintiff's submission that the Commission has such capacity.
It was not suggested by the counsel for the plaintiff that the action could be treated as brought against the Commissioners personally or that an amendment should be made under Rule 1716 to join them as defendants in the place of the Commission, but in any case as the action as brought is against the Commission as an entity and the position taken by counsel was simply that it was a suable party I do not think the case is one of mere misnomer of the defendant or that the action can be regarded as having been in fact intended as an action against the individual com missioners in their personal capacities or be treat ed as having been brought against them. See Annual Practice 1965 at page 245 in relation to English Order 15, Rule 6, which corresponded to Rule 1716 of the Rules of this Court. The result, as I see it, is that for lack of a defendant capable of being sued there is really no action and that what purport to be a statement of claim and an action are null and void.
In the course of his argument counsel appearing for the Commission submitted that as an interna tional commission it was, under international law,
immune from suit in the courts of this country. If so, such immunity might conceivably apply to protect the Commissioners in their personal capac ities but, in view of the conclusion I have reached, it appears to me to be unnecessary to consider or deal with the submission.
Having concluded that the proceeding should be treated as null, it appears to me that in order to terminate it it should be dismissed. But I should not leave the matter without observing that if, as I think, the action was misconceived, so also were the acceptance of service, the application for leave to enter a conditional appearance, the entry of such an appearance and the bringing of a motion under Rule 419(1)(a).
The action will be dismissed without costs.
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