Judgments

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A-224-90
Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Alberta (Appellant)
v.
The Edmonton Friends of the North Environmen tal Society, The Peace River Environmental Society A.K.A. Friends of the Peace, The Metis Association of the Northwest Territories, The Friends of the Athabasca Environmental Associa tion, The Northern Light Society, and the Dene Nation (Respondents)
INDEXED AS: EDMONTON FRIENDS OF THE NORTH ENVIRON MENTAL SOCIETY V. CANADA (MINISTER OF WESTERN ECO NOMIC DIVERSIFICATION) (C.A.)
Court of Appeal, Iacobucci C.J., Heald and Stone JJ.A.—Edmonton, September 10; Ottawa, Sep- tember 28, 1990.
Practice — Parties — Joinder — Order adding Crown in right of Alberta as party respondent imposing conditions on cross-examination, pleadings, time frames, and costs — Status of party and intervenor different — R. 1716(2)(6) permitting addition of parties on such terms as Court thinks just — Order not just and reasonable because conditions tantamount to reducing status to that of intervenor — Discre tion under R. 1716(2)(b) not absolute, but subject to reason ableness — Conditions deleted — Joinder proper, though no relief claimed against provincial Crown — Party whose rights directly affected by litigation should be able to appeal.
Environment — Order joining provincial Crown as party respondent to s. 18 proceedings seeking to quash decisions of federal Ministers re: construction of pulp mill — Provincial rights as owner of railway bridge and spur and of natural resources directly affected by litigation — Joinder proper, although no relief claimed against Province, as should have right of appeal.
This was an appeal from an order adding the appellant as a respondent subject to very strict restrictions as to cross-exami nation, pleadings, time frames and costs. In imposing condi tions, the Trial Judge relied by way of analogy on Rule 1716(2)(b), which permits the addition of parties "on such terms as [the Court] thinks just". The appellant was joined based on a belief that it "ought to have been joined" and to give it appeal rights.
The proceedings seek to quash decisions of several federal Ministers pertaining to the construction of a pulp mill and related facilities on the Peace River. The appellant asserted a direct interest in the outcome of the proceedings as owner of a railway spur and bridge across the Peace River being built incidentally to the construction of the pulp mill and as owner of natural resources in the province in respect of which the appellant enjoys exclusive constitutional jurisdiction, including the right to issue permits, licences and to generally manage these resources. The spur had been largely completed and bridge construction had commenced.
The issues were whether the Trial Judge, in imposing condi tions, acted within the discretion conferred by Rule 1716(2)(b) and (by way of cross-appeal) whether the appellant should have been joined at all as respondent, since no relief was claimed against the Crown in right of Alberta and the Trial Division lacks jurisdiction to grant relief against Her under the invoked legislation.
Held, the appeal should be allowed and the cross-appeal dismissed.
The order was not "just and reasonable" and the conditions imposed thereby should be deleted. Rule 1716 is not a rule for joining an intervenor, but for joining a party. There is a significant difference between the position of an intervenor and a party. The discretion conferred by Rule 1716(2)(b), while broad, is not absolute, but is subject to being exercised upon reasonable grounds. The Judge erred in imposing conditions which were so fundamental as to reduce the appellant's role almost to that of an intervenor rather than of a full party.
The appellant was properly joined even though no relief was claimed against Her. Parties have been joined against whom no relief was sought and, as here, where a party's rights will be directly affected by the outcome of the litigation so that he should have a right of appeal.
The possible enlargement and delay of the proceedings caused by the joinder of the appellant are consequences which may normally flow from any legal proceedings in which a third party's rights will be directly affected by the outcome.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guide
lines Order, SOR/84-467.
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, s. 18.
Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 1716(2)(b).
Navigable Waters Protection Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. N-22.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Adidas (Can.) Ltd. v. Skoro Enterprises Ltd., [1971] F.C. 382; (1971), 12 C.P.R. (2d) 67 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Corporation of the City of Toronto v. Morencie, [ 1989] 1 S.C.R. vii; Halton Community Credit Union Ltd. v. ICL Computers Can. Ltd. (1985), 3 C.P.C. (2d) 252 (Ont. C.A.); Performing Rights Organization of Canada Ltd. v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (1986), 7 C.P.R. (3d) 433; 64 N.R. 330 (F.C.A.); International Business Machines Corporation v. Xerox of Canada Limited and Xerox Corporation (1977), 16 N.R. 355 (F.C.A.); Algonquin Mercantile Corp. v. Dart Indust. Can. Ltd. (1984), 5 C.I.P.R. 40; 3 C.P.R. (3d) 143 (F.C.A.); Ayscough v. Bullar (1889), 41 Ch.D. 341 (C.A.); Attor- ney-General v. Pontypridd Waterworks Company, [1908] 1 Ch. 388 (Ch.D.); Dene Nation v. The Queen, [1983] 1 F.C. 146 (T.D.); Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1990] 2 F.C. 18 (C.A.); Curtner v. Circuit, [1968] 2 Q.B. 587 (C.A.); Amon v. Raphael Tuck & Sons Ltd., [1956] I Q.B. 357 (Q.B.D.).
COUNSEL:
Andrea B. Moen for appellant.
John J. Gill for respondents The Edmonton Friends of the North Environmental Society, The Peace River Environmental Society A.K.A. Friends of the Peace, The Metis Asso ciation of the Northwest Territories, The Friends of the Athabasca Environmental Association, The Northern Light Society, and the Dene Nation.
P. John Landry for Daishowa Canada Co. Ltd.
Ingrid C. Hutton, Q.C. for Minister of West ern Economic Diversification, Minister of Transport, Minister of Fisheries and Oceans and Minister of Environment.
SOLICITORS:
Milner & Steer, Edmonton, for appellant.
McCuaig, Desrochers, Edmonton, for respondents The Edmonton Friends of the North Environmental Society, The Peace River Environmental Society A.K.A. Friends of the Peace, The Metis Association of the Northwest Territories, The Friends of the Athabasca Environmental Association, The
Northern Light Society, and the Dene Nation.
Davis & Company, Vancouver, for Daishowa Canada Co. Ltd.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for Min ister of Western Economic Diversification, Minister of Transport, Minister of Fisheries and Oceans and Minister of Environment.
Deputy Minister of Justice, Government of the Northwest Territories, Yellowknife, for the Government of the Northwest Territories.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
STONE J.A.: This is an appeal from an order made by the Trial Division on March 13, 1990 [reasons for which reported at (1990), 34 F.T.R. 137] by which the appellant was added as a party respondent in section 18 [Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7] proceedings commenced by way of an originating notice of motion filed on February 16, 1990. The appellant had applied to that Division to be joined in those proceedings as a party respondent or, alternatively, as an intervenor.
The relief sought in those proceedings are orders in the nature of certiorari and mandamus to be directed against the Minister of Western Econom ic Diversification, the Minister of Transport, the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans and the Minister of the Environment, respondents in the Trial Divi sion proceedings, in respect of decisions made per taining to the construction and operation of a pulp mill and related facilities on the Peace River in northern Alberta. Central to the dispute is the assertion that these decisions are affected by the Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order, SOR/84-467 (the "Guidelines Order") which is said to be binding upon these Ministers and not to have been complied with.
This appeal, together with appeals from similar orders made concurrently in the Trial Division in Court File Nos. T-441-90 (A-211-90 [Daishowa Canada Co. Ltd. v. North Environmental Society,
F.C.A., Stone J.A., judgment dated 28/9/90, not yet reported]), T-441-90 (A-212-90 [Daishowa Canada Co. Ltd. v. Little Red River Band of Indians, F.C.A., Stone J.A., judgment dated 28/9/ 90, not yet reported]) and T-441-90 (A-225-90 [Alberta v. Little Red River Band of Indians, F.C.A., Stone J.A., judgment dated 28/9/90, not yet reported]), were heard at the same time. The reasons given in this file will apply to the other files and will be placed on those files so as to become the reasons for judgment therein as well except as modified or supplemented.
THE ORDER
It will be convenient if I set out the text of the order which is attacked:
ORDER
Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Alberta is to be hereby added as a party Respondent in these proceedings upon the following conditions:
1. No pleadings additional to those already on the record may be filed by this Respondent;
2. The conduct of the Respondent's case must fit within the time frames set out for the conduct of the case by the present parties;
3. The Respondent may attend on any cross-examinations which are held of the applicants' affiants but is not entitled to participate therein. This restriction does not apply to any affidavits filed by the applicants in direct response to any affidavits which this Respondent might file in these proceed ings. To the extent that the cross-examination of one affiant by more than one counsel might arise as a result of this order counsel are directed to avoid duplication and delay by their designating lead counsel or otherwise dividing responsibility.
4. The respondent shall not be entitled to claim costs.
All of the above conditions, are of course, subject to any decision which the judge hearing this application on its merits might make.'
THE ISSUES
Two issues are raised in this appeal which require our attention. The appellant contends that the conditions in question ought to be struck out, and especially so in view of the fact that the Judge had already determined that the case was a proper
' Similarly, the order in Court File No. A-225-90 was made in favour of the appellant, while in Court File Nos. A-211-90 and A-212-90 the orders were made in favour of Daishowa Canada Co. Ltd., the appellant therein.
one for the joinder of the appellant as a party respondent rather than as an intervenor. The respondents by way of a cross-appeal submit that the appellant ought not to have been joined at all because the Trial Division lacks jurisdiction to grant relief against the appellant. 2
DISCUSSION
The conditions
I shall deal first with the issue relating to the conditions. The appellant asserts a direct interest in the outcome of the proceedings as owner of a railway spur and bridge across the Peace River being built incidentally to the construction of the pulp mill by Daishowa Canada Co. Ltd. As of February 23, 1990 the spur was 97% complete and the bridge 26%. Funding for construction of the spur was received in the amount of $9,500,000 from the federal Department of Western Econom ic Diversification. Further, the appellant asserts that Alberta actually issued permits for the con struction of the pulp mill as well as an interim licence for the construction of the water intake/ effluent outfall facilities into the Peace River, with a right to divert water from that river. These facilities were exempted from the provisions of the Navigable Waters Protection Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. N-22 by the Minister of Transport who also grant ed an approval to the appellant in respect of the bridge pursuant to the same statute. The appel lant, accordingly, contends that she should have been granted full respondent standing, free of the conditions contained in the order. As she puts it in paragraph 6 of her memorandum:
6. Alberta has an immediate interest in the outcome of the current proceedings flowing from its ownership of the Bridge and the spur. Furthermore, Alberta owns natural resources generally in the Province of Alberta and has exclusive constitu tional jurisdiction to deal with her natural resources as she sees fit, including the right to issue permits, licenses and to general ly manage these natural resources.
The conditions imposed, she submits, would hamper her ability to adduce evidence, to cross
2 No cross-appeal was launched in the other matters now pending before us.
examine any witnesses adverse in interest and to make submissions.
The learned Judge below gave the following reasons for imposing the impugned conditions [at pages 141-142]:
In this case, 1 have come to the conclusion that the appropri ate course of action is to add Alberta and Daishowa as party respondents but with very strict conditions attached to the roles they may play. This conclusion is based on the fact that the only reason to add them as respondents, instead of as interven- ors, is to accord them appeal rights. It is based on a conscious ness of the principle that the initiating party in a legal proceed ing should normally be able to choose who is added as a party and to control the general structure of the case. It is based very heavily on the fact that. the arguments on the application will be largely legal in nature (the appropriate interpretation of the (EARP) Guidelines and the respective pieces of federal legisla ture) as well as on the fact that all of the relevant evidence should be in the control and the knowledge of the present respondents.
• Rule 1716 contemplates that such terms and conditions may be imposed, when parties are added, if it is just to do so. In the present case I think the following terms fit within that catego ry. While Alberta and Daishowa should have the right to call evidence (i.e. to file affidavit evidence) and to cross-examine affiants of any affidavits filed in reply thereto, I do not think they should be able to add to the issues which the applicants have established as the framework of their case. They will not be given any right to file pleadings but must take the pleadings as they presently exist. With respect to the cross-examination of the applicant's affiants they will be entitled to attend as observers thereon but not to participate therein. The addition of Alberta and Daishowa as respondents should not be allowed to interfere with or delay the timetable which the applicants and the present respondents either agree upon or which the appli cants convince the Court to impose. In this regard, the order adding Alberta and Daishowa as respondents will be on the express condition that they fit themselves within that timetable. In addition, I do not believe that either should be able to claim costs. Orders will issue in accordance with these reasons.
The learned Judge below relied on Rule 1716(2)(b) [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] 3 by way of analogy. She was of the view that the appellant's presence before the Court was not "necessary", and no attack is made on that conclu sion. The ground upon which she seems to have decided to join the appellant as a party respondent
3 Rule 1716... .
(2) At any stage of an action the Court may, on such terms
as it thinks just and either of its own motion or on application,
(Continued on next page)
was that the appellant "ought to have been joined", though she also thought the joinder should be permitted because she believed the appellant wished "to acquire rights of appeal" (Appeal Book, page 31).
Rule 1716(2)(b) is not peculiar to practice and procedure in the Federal Court. It, or a variation of it, has been a feature of the rules governing practice and procedure in the Supreme Court of Ontario since at least 1913. It was apparently inherited from England. It is not a rule for joining an intervenor but for joining a party. There is, of course, a significant difference between the posi tion of an intervenor in proceedings and that of a party. The intervenor, for example, must as a rule take the record as he finds it. He has no status to pursue an appeal (Corporation of the City of Toronto v. Morencie, [1989] 1 S.C.R. vii). On the other hand, a party joined by order of a court will normally enjoy the same rights as those of other parties including the right to adduce evidence and to make submissions. It has been said, indeed, that he holds an absolute right to cross-examine wit nesses adverse in interest (see Halton Community Credit Union Ltd. v. ICL Computers Can. Ltd. (1985), 3 C.P.C. (2d) 252 (Ont. C.A.), at page 253).
The real question at this stage is whether the Judge below, in imposing the conditions in ques tion, acted properly within the discretion vested in her by Rule 1716(2)(b). That discretion is undoubtedly broad—"on such terms as it thinks just"—but it is not an absolute power to be exer cised with full and complete discretion. Such a broad discretion is subject to the constraint of
(Continued from previous page)
(b) order any person who ought to have been joined as a party or whose presence before the Court is necessary to ensure that all matters in dispute in the action may be effectually and completely determined and adjudicated upon, to be added as a party....
being exercised upon reasonable grounds. Although this Court must be slow to interfere with the exercise of a discretion such as this, it may do so on certain limited grounds including if we should find that the order is not "just and reasonable." 5
The section 18 application is, as I have said, brought against several federal ministers. If it succeeds, the consequences for the appellant could well be quite severe. Money the appellant has invested in the bridge and railway spur might be put in jeopardy if the mill is unable to operate or its operation is delayed significantly on account of the failure of the federal ministers to comply with the Guidelines Order, assuming that order is found to be binding upon them. The efficacy of any permits and licences issued under provincial law for construction of the mill as well as for the intake/outfall facilities on the basis of a federal exemption granted to the mill owner Daishowa Canada Co. Ltd. pursuant to the Navigable Waters Protection Act, might be put in question. Yet, the appellant will not be able to adduce her own evidence and advance her own arguments that the Guidelines Order is inapplicable because a federal-provincial agreement purports to leave environmental assessment of the project in the hands of the Province. She will be prevented, also, from delving fully into any aspect of the matter which may bear upon the exercise of discretion vested in the Trial Division under section 18.
The order below is somewhat of a hybrid, par taking of features both of an order joining a party simpliciter and, with the addition of the condi tions, of an order granting intervenor status. I am
° See e.g. Performing Rights Organization of Canada Ltd. v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (1986), 7 C.P.R. (3d) 433 (F.C.A.), per Heald J.A., at pp. 445-446.
See e.g. International Business Machines Corporation v. Xerox of Canada Limited and Xerox Corporation (1977), 16 N.R. 355 (F.C.A.); Algonquin Mercantile Corp. v. Dart Indust. Can. Ltd. (1984), 5 C.I.P.R. 40 (F.C.A.).
not at all certain that the Judge was correct in adding those conditions. 6
We have not had drawn to our attention any case in which a court, having decided to join a party before a matter was heard, qualified the role of the new party in such fundamental ways as those found in the conditions. Those conditions go a long way, in my opinion, towards reducing the appellant's role in the proceedings to more like that of an intervenor than of a full party. They limit the appellant in the evidence she may wish to adduce, in cross-examination and in the position she may wish to adopt. They require the appellant, in effect, to take the record as she finds it and to conform to a "timetable" for the hearing of the section 18 application regardless of the impact that timetable may have on the ability of the appellant to advance her own position.'
The order below also deprives the appellant of costs in the section 18 proceedings even though the final decision is left to the judge hearing that application. In my view such a condition could well affect the way in which that judge exercises the discretion in the matter. It would have been better to say nothing about costs and leave the matter entirely in the hands of that judge, to be exercised in the way he or she may feel most appropriate having regard to the circumstances prevailing at the time the discretion is to be exercised. That judge is in the best position to make the decision unaffected by the views of the learned motions judge formed at the preliminary stage.
'I do not think it desirable to lay down a general rule for the construction of the words of discretion in Rule 1716(2)(b). While the Rule gives no guidance as to the way the discretion should be exercised, it permits a judge, at a minimum, to require an applicant to pay the costs of the interlocutory application (see e.g. Ayscough v. Bullar (1889), 41 Ch.D. 341 (C.A.); Attorney-General v. Pontypridd Waterworks Com pany, [1908] 1 Ch. 388 (Ch.D.)),, though it is broader than that. Such an order as to costs would not interfere with the ordinary rights the person joined may exercise as a party in the underlying proceedings.
' At the hearing we were told that the section 18 application is now scheduled to be heard in early 1991. The agreed upon "timetable" seems thus to have been overtaken by events in that it was apparently drawn with a view to a date in July 1990 when the plant was expected to commence operations, which it did.
In summary the order, in my view, is not "just and reasonable" because of the conditions it imposes. I would delete those conditions.
Jurisdiction
It now becomes necessary to address the submis sion of the respondents in their cross-appeal that the Judge below ought not to have joined the appellant because no claim for relief is made against her, and also because the Trial Division would lack jurisdiction to grant relief to the appel lant under the invoked legislation (Dene Nation v. The Queen, [1983] 1 F.C. 146 (T.D.)). The courts have sometimes joined a party defendant even though no relief would be sought against him,' and have recognized also that the party joined would be enabled to resist the relief sought and be heard on the terms of any judgment.' Much will depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. This Court has been willing to join a party in proceed ings such as these simply because, as that party's rights will be directly affected by the outcome of the dispute, he should be enabled to assert rights of appeal (Adidas (Can.) Ltd. v. Skoro Enterprises Ltd., [1971] F.C. 382 (C.A.); Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1990] 2 F.C. 18 (C.A.)). The princi ple enunciated by this Court in Adidas would appear to apply with even greater force where, as here, the section 18 application is still pending in the Trial Division.
DISPOSITION
I should add one final word before disposing of this appeal. The respondents fear that the presence of the appellant as a full party will enlarge and delay the section 18 proceedings and will add to the costs. I agree that all these things are possible but, surely, these are but consequences which may normally flow from any legal proceedings in which a third party's rights will be directly affected by the outcome. The Court has power to control its
8 Curtner v. Circuit, [1968] 2 Q.B. 587 (C.A.).
9 Compare Anion v. Raphael Tuck & Sons Ltd., [1956] 1 Q.B. 357 (Q.B.D.), at p. 383.
own process in order to ensure that justice is done and, to that end, it may in appropriate circum stances deal with any obvious abuse of its process in a variety of ways including by the levying of costs. No such abuse is evident on the record before us.
In the result I would allow the appeal with costs and would amend the order made March 13, 1990 by deleting therefrom all of the words commencing with the words "upon the following conditions:" so that the order as amended will read:
Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Alberta is to be hereby added as a party Respondent in these proceedings.
The style of cause in this application shall be amended to reflect the adding of Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Alberta as a party Respondent.
The cross-appeal is dismissed. IACOBUCCI C.J.: I agree.
HEALD J.A.: I concur.
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