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A-558-79
The Queen (Appellant) v.
Sovereign Seat Cover Mfg. Limited and Fingerhut International Limited (Respondents)
Court of Appeal, Urie and Ryan JJ. and Kerr D.J.—Ottawa, December 19, 1979 and February 11, 1980.
Practice — Motion to strike pleadings — Appeal from decision of Trial Judge to strike statement of claim because action was founded in contract and not in federal law — Action was to recover moneys paid under a development incentive grant because defendants failed to comply with the conditions of the grant — Whether action is based on contract or on federal law — Appeal allowed — Federal Court Rule 419 — Regional Development Incentives Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. R-3, as amended by R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 25, ss. 4, 5, 6, 10 — Regional Development Incentives Regulations, SOR/69- 398, as amended by SOR/71-51, ss. 7, 15, 16.
Appeal from a judgment granting a motion brought by the respondents to strike the statement of claim as disclosing no cause of action. The initial action was brought by the Crown to recover moneys paid under a development incentive grant because the defendants failed to observe the conditions on which the grant had been made and thus acted contrary to sections 15 and 16 of the Regional Development Incentives Regulations. The Crown's offer was that the amount of the development incentive was conditional upon the approved capi tal costs of the proposed development and the number of jobs, averaged over the second and third years after the date of commercial production, as determined by the Minister to have been created directly in the new products portion of the opera tion of the new facility. The defendants accepted the Crown's offer, but subsequently failed to comply with its terms. They also failed to repay the grant. The Trial Judge struck the statement of claim because he found that the liability was not imposed or created by the statute. Thus the issue on appeal is whether the Crown's action is based on federal law or whether it is based on contract.
Held, the appeal is allowed. The right to the incentive is based on the provisions of the Act, particularly section 10. Similarly the right of the Crown to recover the sum claimed in this action is a right based on the terms of sections 15 and 16 of the Regulations, which are operative as such and not by virtue of their incorporation in a contract between the Crown and the defendants. Even if, on a study of relevant documents, it were determined that the written offer and acceptance contained contractual elements, the claim asserted by the plaintiff in this case as determined by reading the statement of claim, would be based on the relevant sections of the Regulations. It follows that the claim is based on a federal regulation and thus on applicable federal law and is within the jurisdiction of the
Federal Court. The relevant sections of the Regulations impose directly and in express terms the obligation to repay.
R. v. Rhine [1979] 2 F.C. 651, applied.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
T. L. James for appellant. G. E. Fisk for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant.
Gowling & Henderson, Ottawa, for respond ent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
RYAN J.: This is an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division* delivered September 11, 1979, granting a motion brought by the respondents (the defendants in the action), pursuant to paragraph 419(1)(a) of the Federal Court Rules', to strike the statement of claim as showing no cause of action which is within the jurisdiction of the Fed eral Court.
The purpose of the action brought by the Crown is to recover from the defendants a sum of money representing 80% of a development incentive grant. Payment was made to the defendants on or about March 7, 1974, pursuant to the Regional Development Incentives Act 2 and the Regional Development Incentives Regulations ("the Regulations") 3 . The claim is based on an allega tion that the defendants had not observed the
* [Not distributed—Ed.]
' Paragraph 419(1)(a) of the Federal Court Rules provides: 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,
and may order the action to be stayed or dismissed or judgment to be entered accordingly.
2 R.S.C. 1970, c. R-3, as amended.
3 SOR/69-398, as amended by SOR/71-51.
conditions on which the grant had been made and thus had acted contrary to sections 15 and 16 of the Regulations.
The learned Trial Judge was of the view that the payment of the incentive had been made under the terms of a contract between the parties, a contract constituted by the acceptance by the defendants of a written offer made to them by the plaintiff. He found that the alleged liability of the defendants to make repayment was based on this contract; it was not in his view a liability imposed or created by the federal Act or Regulations. The statute, as he read it, "... creates conditions precedent to an entry into a contract between the parties and certain terms to be included therein but does not, of itself, create the right sought to be enforced and it follows that while the liability arises as a conse quence of the Statute it is not a liability imposed or created by the Statute and is therefore not a liability created by and based on a federal law." Having so found, he struck the statement of claim, basing his decision on McNamara Construction (Western) Ltd. v. The Queen 4 .
The issue in this appeal thus is whether the Regional Development Incentives Act and Regula tions provide the basis for the Crown's action or whether the claim is one based on contract.
I will state in rather more detail certain of the facts alleged in the statement of claim.
It was alleged that, as far back as December 1971, the defendant Sovereign Seat Cover Mfg. Limited ("Sovereign Seat Cover") made an application for a development incentive. There were negotiations. A written offer of an incentive, made on behalf of the Minister of Regional Eco nomic Expansion, was accepted by Sovereign Seat Cover on March 3, 1972. But as a result of circumstances, which are set out in the statement of claim, the original offer was declared by the parties to be null and void.
The Crown allegedly made another written offer on February 1, 1974, this time to both defendants, Sovereign Seat Cover and Fingerhut International Limited. It was a term of the offer that the amount of the development incentive was based on
4 [1977] 2 S.C.R. 654.
the approved capital costs of the proposed develop ment and the number of jobs, averaged over the second and third years after the date of commer cial production, as determined by the Minister to have been created directly in the new products portion of the operation of the new facility. This new offer was accepted by the defendants on Feb- ruary 24, 1974.
It was also alleged that on March 7, 1974, a cheque in the amount of $109,280, representing 80% of the development incentive, was sent to the defendants. I presume that the cheque was sent pursuant to the Minister's obligation under section 10 of the Act 5 .
The statement of claim then sets out these alle gations in its paragraphs 15 and 16:
15. In or about the month of February, 1977, the Plaintiff discovered that the Defendants or either of them had, prior to October 31st, 1976, discontinued without notice to the Plaintiff, manufacturing vacuum cleaners and comforters, and therefore had ceased operating the eligible assets comprised in the approved capital costs on which the amount of the development incentive was based and had also failed to create the estimated
5 Section 10 of the Regional Development Incentives Act provides:
10. When the Minister is satisfied that a facility for the establishment, expansion or modernization of which a de velopment incentive has been authorized, the amount of which was based on
(a) the approved capital costs of establishing, expanding or modernizing the facility, or
(b) the approved capital costs of establishing or expanding the facility and the number of jobs created directly in the operation,
has been brought into commercial production or, in the case of a facility for the expansion or modernization of which a development incentive has been authorized, the expanded or modernized facility has been brought into commercial pro duction, the Minister shall pay to the applicant an amount on account of the development incentive not exceeding 80% of the amount estimated by the Minister to be the amount of the development incentive, and the remainder of the incen tive shall be paid in such amounts and within such period,
(c) not longer than 30 months from the day the facility or the expanded or modernized facility was brought into commercial production, in a case to which paragraph (a) applies and to which paragraph (b) does not apply, or
(d) not longer than 42 months from the day the facility or the expanded facility was brought into commercial produc tion, in a case to which paragraph (b) applies, as are prescribed by the regulations.
43 jobs associated with the said new products in the second and third years immediately following the dates on which the facility was brought into commercial production, all contrary to Sections 15 and 16 of the Regulations under the Regional Development Incentive Act.
16. The Plaintiff has requested repayment of the Total develop ment incentive paid to the Defendants pursuant to the provi sions of the said Act and Regulations but to date, the Defend ants have omitted or refused to remit the monies owing to the Plaintiff.
Sections 15 and 16 of the Regulations provide:
15. (1) It is a condition of a development incentive in respect of a facility that, if
(a) during the 24 months immediately following the date on which the facility is brought into commercial production, in the case of a facility in respect of which the development incentive is based only on the approved capital costs, or
(b) during the 36 months immediately following the date on which the facility is brought into commercial production, in the case of a facility in respect of which the development incentive is based in part on the number of jobs created in the operation,
eligible assets comprised in the approved capital costs on which the amount of development incentive is based cease to be used in the facility, the applicant shall, unless the Minister deter mines that the cessation of use was unavoidable, repay to Her Majesty such amount of the development incentive as may be determined by the Minister to be the same proportion of the total development incentive as the approved capital costs of the eligible assets that have ceased to be used in the facility are of the total approved capital costs.
(2) An applicant shall
(a) notify the Minister forthwith upon ceasing to use eligible assets under the circumstances referred to in subsection (1); and
(b) repay any amount required to be repaid by him pursuant to subsection (1) not later than four months from the date on which the eligible assets so ceased to be used.
16. It is a condition of any development incentive that is based in part on the number of jobs created in the operation that, if during the second and third years immediately following the date on which the facility is brought into commercial production, the number of jobs created directly in the operation is less than the estimated number of jobs on which payments on account of the development incentive are based, the applicant shall repay to Her Majesty the amount paid on account of the development incentive that was related to the number of jobs that were not so created.
The purpose of the Regional Development Incentives Act is stated in its general title:
An Act to provide incentives for the development of productive employment opportunities in regions of Canada determined to require special measures to facilitate economic expansion and social adjustment.
The statute and the Regulations provide a detailed code or scheme empowering the Minister of Regional Economic Expansion to authorize the provision of development incentives to applicants for them (section 4); provide the basis for deter mining the amount of a primary development incentive, a secondary development incentive, and a special development incentive (section 5); fix the maximum amount of a development incentive and authorize the provision of incentives of lesser amounts (section 6); and require the Minister to pay the authorized incentives (section 10). The Act covers many other details of the regional incentives program, as do the Regulations.
Section 7 of the Regulations refers to "any offer of a development incentive under the Act". It is obviously envisaged that, when the Minister has considered an application in the light of the provi sions of the Act and the Regulations, he may offer to provide an incentive—a grant—to an applicant in an amount and on terms, consistent with the Act and the Regulations, he considers appropriate. The authorization of the incentive will, again quite obviously, depend on the applicant's acceptance of the terms. This does not mean, however, that the applicant's right to the incentive becomes contrac tual in nature when he "accepts the offer". His right to the incentive is based on the provisions of the Act, particularly on section 10.
Similarly, the right of the Crown to recover the sum claimed in this action is a right based on the terms of sections 15 and 16 of the Regulations, quoted above, which are operative as such and not by virtue of their incorporation in a contract be tween the Crown and the defendants. Even if, on a study of relevant documents, it were determined that the written offer and the acceptance con tained contractual elements, the claim asserted by the plaintiff in this case, as determined by reading the statement of claim, would be based on the relevant sections of the Regulations.
It follows that the claim as asserted in the statement of claim is a claim based on a federal regulation and thus on applicable federal law. In this respect, the statement of claim is based on a
cause of action within the jurisdiction of the Fed eral Court 6 .
I may say that, in my view, the decision of this Court in The Queen v. Rhine', relied on by the appellant, is clearly applicable. That case involved a claim by the Crown for repayment of a prairie grain advance payment made to the defendant under the Prairie Grain Advance Payments Act'. The submission on behalf of the defendant had been that the liability to repay was imposed by the undertaking he was required by the Act to give prior to receiving the advance payment, not by the Act itself. The Prairie Grain Advance Payments Act was, however, regarded by the Court as an integral part of a larger scheme or plan provided by the Canadian Wheat Board Act 9 for marketing prairie grains. The obligation to repay had its source in the legislation and not in any contractual promise founded on the undertaking required by the statute. I would say that, if anything, the present case is even more clearly a case in which the Crown claim is based on a federal statutory obligation. The relevant sections of the Regula tions impose directly and in express terms the obligation to repay.
I would allow the appeal with costs.
I would set aside the judgment appealed from and substitute a judgment dismissing with costs the defendants' motion, dated September 5, 1979, seeking an order to strike the statement of claim.
* * *
URIE J.: I concur.
* * *
KERR D.J.: I concur.
6 Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10,
section 17.
' [1979] 2 F.C. 651.
' R.S.C. 1970, c. P-18, as amended.
9 R.S.C. 1970, c. C-12, as amended.
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