Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-2230-89
Edelbert Tetzlaff and Harold Tetzlaff (Appli- cants)
v.
Minister of the Environment and Saskatchewan Water Corporation (Respondents)
INDEXED AS: TETZLAFF V. CANADA (MINISTER OF THE ENVI RONMENT) (T.D.)
Trial Division, Muldoon J.—Winnipeg, January 23; Ottawa, February 1, 1991.
Practice — Parties — Intervention — Trial Division Judge striking out Sask. Water as respondent as Federal Court Act, s. 2 excluding provincially constituted bodies from definition of 'federal board, commission or other tribunal" — Court of
Appeal restoring respondent status Cases upon which Court of Appeal relied distinguished, not followed — Sask. Water again granted intervenor status to defend federal licence — Intervention herein defined to include right of appeal — Necessity for legislative change — Directions for future pro ceedings, absent amendments to Federal Court Act, where federal licensee immunized from s. 18 proceedings.
Practice — Parties — Joinder — Where federal licensee precluded from respondent status by Federal Court Act, s. 2 because provincially constituted body, R. 1716 not applicable by analogy according to R. 5 as R. 1716 applies only to actions.
Practice — "Gap" Rule — Court of Appeal restoring Sask. Water's respondent status after struck as respondent because provincially constituted bodies excepted from definition of 'federal board, commission or other tribunal" in Federal Court Act, s. 2 — Cannot invoke R. 5 where matter otherwise provided for by any provision in any Act of Parliament — S. 2 providing Sask. Water cannot be sued pursuant to s. 18.
Judges and Courts Stare decisis Trial Division Judge,
ex mero motu, striking out respondent as provincial creature, not 'federal board, commission or other tribunal" (Federal
Court Act, s. 2) Appeal Division restoring respondent status
— Trial Division Judge again ordering intervenor status only
— Trial Division Judge in invidious position of not following F.C.A. decision or disregarding federal statute which judges of both divisions sworn to uphold — Court of Appeal basing decision on earlier F.C.A. case decided per incuriam — Cases relied on by Court of Appeal not followed, distinguished.
In November, 1989 the Court, ex mero motu, struck out as a respondent Saskatchewan Water Corporation (Sask. Water), which held a federal licence from the respondent Minister, because Federal Court Act, section 2 specifically excludes "any body constituted or established by or under a law of a province" from the definition of "federal board, commission or other tribunal". It was given intervenor status. In December 1990, the Court of Appeal restored Sask. Water as a respondent, relying upon Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1990] 2 F.C. 18 (C.A.) and Adidas (Can.) Ltd. v. Skoro Enterprises Ltd., [1971] F.C. 382 (C.A.). The latter case was interpreted to mean that any person who might be adversely affected by an order may be joined as a party to the proceeding so that it can pursue whatever remedy may be open to it by way of appeal therefrom. The Court was thus put in the invidious position of having to disregard either a unanimous panel of the Appeal Division or an unambiguous Act of Parliament which Judges of both divisions are sworn to uphold.
Held, Sask. Water should be granted intervenor status.
Oldman River was distinguished. There the Court was deal ing with the jurisdiction over the Crown in right of Alberta, which is not an entity created by or under any provincial legislation, but by the Constitution concurrently with the crea tion of the province of Alberta. Federal Court Act, section 25 could be invoked in the case of the provincial Crown, but nothing in that section or elsewhere overrides the clear excep tion in section 2 to what is a "federal board, commission or other tribunal" for purposes of being a respondent in proceed ings brought under section 18.
The Adidas case appears to have been decided per incuriam. The Federal Court of Appeal made no reference to the section 2 definition and exception to "federal board, commission or other tribunal". In any event, it should be distinguished because the putative respondent was not a body like a "federal board, commission or other tribunal". Furthermore, the Court indicat ed that the principles for joinder of parties which Rule 1716 prescribes should be applied by analogy according to Rule 5. Rule 5 cannot, however, be invoked where any matter arises which is otherwise provided for by any provision in any Act of Parliament. Federal Court Act, section 2 provides that a body such as Sask. Water cannot be sued under section 18. Rule 1716 did not apply because it applies only to actions, not to motions or other proceedings. A person or corporation over whom the Court could not have exercised jurisdiction ab initio cannot be added as a party respondent.
Sask. Water should be permitted to join in these proceedings as an intervenor to defend its federal licence and so that it might appeal against any order which impinges upon its rights under the licence. Sask. Water has undertaken to pay any costs awarded against it. In the absence of any specific rule that the applicants should be liable to pay costs to Sask. Water, the applicants shall not be liable to pay any of Sask Water's costs. Rule 5 permits the Court in a situation of intervention by necessity to determine the practice and procedure by analogy to
the other provisions of these Rules, or to the Saskatchewan practice. The only case law cited dealt with control of the Court's own process. Rule 1010, an admiralty rule permitting intervention in an action in rem, requires the Court to define the intervenor's rights. That Rule, by an invocation of Rule 5, would be applied herein such that, in addition to permitting the intervention on the same terms as in the original section 18 proceedings, Sask. Water is given the right to appeal an adverse order impinging upon its rights as a federal licensee.
The ad hoc nature of this disposition which circumvented the Court's statutory absence of jurisdiction and the need for legislation to solve the problem which is likely to arise again in this new field of cross-jurisdictional, federal environmental law was recognized. The Court should never again exercise its discretion in this ad hoc manner. In future, absent amendments to the Federal. Court Act, where a federal licensee is immu nized from section 18 proceedings, the applicants ought to serve the licensee with copies of their section 18 process in a timely fashion. The licensee could then commence a parallel section 18 proceeding claiming prerogative relief against the federal au thority, seeking simultaneously to have its section 18 applica tion heard at the same time as the applicants' motion. The immune licensee would then be an original full party.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Constitution Act, 1867, 30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5], s. 101.
Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44], ss. 41(a), 45.
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, ss. 2, 18, 19, 25.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED NOT FOLLOWED:
Adidas (Can.) Ltd. v. Skoro Enterprises Ltd., [19711 F.C. 382; (1971), 12 C.P.R. (2d) 67 (C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minis- ter of Transport), [1990] 2 F.C. 18; (1990), 68 D.L.R. (4th) 375 (C.A.).
CONSIDERED:
Canadian Wildlife Federation Inc. v. Canada (Minister of the Environment), [1990] 1 F.C. 595; (1989), 32 F.T.R. 81 (T.D.); Canadian Wildlife Federation Inc. et al. v. Canada (Minister of the Environment) and Sas- katchewan Water Corp. (1989), 31 F.T.R. 1 (F.C.T.D.);
Carruthers v. Therapeutic Abortion Committees, [1983] 2 F.C. 581; (1983), 1 Admin. L.R. 266 (T.D.); affd. (1983), 6 D.L.R. (4th) 57; 4 Admin. L.R. 51; 50 N.R. 373 (F.C.A.); Halco Inc. v. Sandrin Brothers (1968) Ltd., A-582-85, F.C.A., Hugessen J.A., judgment dated 17-2-86, not reported; Fishing Vessel Owners' Assn. of B.C. v. A.G. Can. (1985), 1 C.P.C. (2d) 312; 57 N.R. 376 (F.C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Union Oil Co. of Canada Ltd. v. The Queen, [1976] 1 F.C. 74; (1975), 72 D.L.R. (3d) 81 (C.A.); affd. [1976] 2 S.C.R. v; Martinoff v. Gossen, [1978] 2 F.C. 537; (1978), 46 C.C.C. (2d) 368 (T.D.); Canadian Red Cross Society v. Simpsons Limited, [1983] 2 F.C. 372; (1983), 70 C.P.R. (2d) 19 (T.D.); Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1986] 2 F.C. 233; (1986), I C.I.P.R. 53; 9 C.P.R. (3d) 193; 1 F.T.R. 310 (T.D.); Corporation of the City of Toronto v. Morencie, [ 1989] 1 S.C.R. vii; (1989), 104 N.R. 298.
AUTHORS CITED
Sgayias, David et al. Federal Court Practice 1990, Toronto: Carswell, 1990.
COUNSEL:
Allan W. Scarth, Q.C., and Gordon H. A. Mackintosh for applicants.
Craig J. Henderson for respondent Minister of the Environment.
D. E. Gauley, Q.C., C. Wheatley and R. G. Kennedy for intervenor Saskatchewan Water Corporation.
SOLICITORS:
Thompson, Dorfman & Sweatman, Win- nipeg, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent Minister of the Environment. Gauley & Company, Saskatoon, Saskatche- wan and Saskatchewan Water Corporation, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, for intervenor Saskatchewan Water Corporation.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
MULDOON J.: At the earlier convocation of the hearing of this matter, on November 30, 1989 [sub nom. Canadian Wildlife Federation Inc. v. Canada (Minister of the Environment), [ 1990] 1 F.C. 595], the Court ex mero motu struck out the Saskatchewan Water Corporation (hereinafter
Sask. Water) in the capacity of respondent, and, with the consent of the other parties, and upon the application of Sask. Water, accorded it the status of an intervenor. The reason for that order, alter ing Sask. Water's status, was based on the specific exclusion of the creature of a province from the designation of "federal board, commission or other tribunal" effected in section 2 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7. There the Court noted that, were it not for that specific exclusion, Sask. Water, as the holder of a federal licence from the respondent Minister which has undertak en to obey and observe all the relevant laws of Canada, could well evince the status of a federal board, commission or other tribunal, for the pur pose of being impleaded as a respondent pursuant to section 18 of the Federal Court Act. However, because Sask. Water is a "body constituted by or under a law of a province", it is specifically excluded from the designation of "federal board, commission or other tribunal" which otherwise broadly is the sole object of both paragraphs (a) and (b) of section 18 of the Federal Court Act.
Upon appeal against the Court's substantive order pronounced on December 28, 1989 [(1989), 31 F.T.R. 1 (F.C.T.D.)], the particular division of the Appeal Division which heard the appeal unani mously restored Sask. Water to the status of respondent, according to footnote 10 of its unani mous reasons for judgment (A-48-90) rendered on December 21, 1990 [[1991] 1 F.C. 641]. This the Appeal Division did, not of its own motion, but on the application of Sask. Water. It was an extreme ly practical gesture by that panel of the Appeal Division and one for which the law should long have made provision "for the better administration of the laws of Canada" pursuant to section 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867 [30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act, 1982, 1982 c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5]].
Although section 19 of the Federal Court Act comes to mind because, according to counsel for Sask. Water, the Legislature of Saskatchewan has passed an Act to comply with the terms of para graph 19(a), if not also (b), those provisions do not apply to the present case. This case would, how ever, fit classically into section 25 of the Federal
Court Act, were it not for the absolutely clear and imperative words of exclusion of Sask. Water from proceedings pursuant to section 18, as mandated by the designation of a "federal board, commission or other tribunal", which is restrictively sculpted in section 2.
The disposition of the Court of Appeal in the Tetzlaff brothers' appeal above noted, puts this Court in the invidious position of either disregard ing the unanimous panel of the Appeal Division or disregarding the unambiguous Act of Parliament. The footnote by which the panel reported its resto ration of the respondent status to Sask. Water runs as follows [at page 649]:
10 By order made ex mero motu, dated November 30, 1989 [[1990] 1 F.C. 595 (T.D.)], Muldoon J. struck out Sask. Water as a respondent for want of jurisdiction in this Court but allowed Sask. Water to participate as an intervenor and amend ed the style of cause accordingly. See Appeal Book, Tab 4 Sask. Water by notice of motion, dated November 19, 1990, sought an order adding Sask. Water as a party respondent/ cross-appellant in these proceedings and this Court granted the order requested relying on Friends of the Oldman River Socie ty v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1990] 2 F.C. 18 (C.A.), at p. 52, and ordered the style of cause to be so amended. Sask. Water also sought to adduce additional evidence pursuant to Rule 1102 [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] but this was denied.
The passage referred to in the unanimous Oldman River [Friends of the Oldman River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1990] 2 F.C. 18 (C.A.)] reasons for judgment, at page 52, runs thus:
THE PROVINCIAL CROWN
Two questions need be discussed at this point, namely, the jurisdiction of the Court over Her Majesty in right of Alberta as a party respondent and, secondly, whether that party is immune from the provisions of the Navigable Waters Protec tion Act.
Jurisdiction
The issue was raised before us but not in the Court below, and derives from the decision of the Trial Division of Novem- ber 30, 1989 in the Canadian Wildlife Federation Inc. v. Canada (Minister of the Environment), [[1990] I F.C. 595 (T.D.)], matter. It was there held the Court lacked jurisdiction over one of the respondents because, as a body constituted and established by the laws of Saskatchewan, it was not a "federal board, commission or other tribunal" as defined in section 2 of the Federal Court Act. The question here is whether Her Majesty the Queen in right of Alberta is to be similarly viewed
and, accordingly, whether we should find that the Court is without jurisdiction over this party.
It seems to me that the point was settled by this Court in Adidas (Can.) Ltd. v. Skoro Enterprises Ltd., [1971] F.C. 382, which 1 interpret as holding that any person who might be adversely affected by an order such as the one here sought may be joined as a party to the proceeding "so that it can pursue whatever remedy may be open to it by way of appeal there from". In my opinion, the party in question is properly before us as a party respondent.
First of all, it must be noted, and not as a mere technicality, that the Crown in right of Alberta is not an entity created by or under any provincial legislation whatever, but rather created by the Constitution concurrently with the creation, in 1905, of the province of Alberta. Each province has the power to amend its own constitution (now section 45 of the Constitution Act, 1982 [Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44]]) except as regards the office of Lieutenant Governor (now section 41, paragraph (a)), that is to say, the Queen's repre sentative. Such a distinction between the Crown in right of a province, and a body such as Sask. Water, created by provincial legislation is so marked that in the case of the provincial Crown, it is quite probable that section 25 of the Federal Court Act could be invoked. Alas, nothing in section 25, or elsewhere, proclaims that it over rides the clear exception to what is a federal board, commission or other tribunal for purposes of being a respondent in proceedings brought pursuant to section 18 of the Federal Court Act.
Next, the decision announced in footnote 10 must be traced back for its basis to Adidas (Can.) Ltd. v. Skoro Enterprises Ltd., [1971] F.C. 382 (C.A.), since the judgment in the Oldman River case, at page 52, does not deal with the status of a body created by provincial legislation, as is Sask. Water. In the Adidas case, above noted, the Appeal Division characterized the proceedings as having been brought by Skoro for a mandamus directing the Deputy Minister of National Reve nue to admit into Canada certain shoes belonging to Skoro and held by customs officials. The Court there noted that [at page 383]:
Jurisdiction to entertain such a proceeding is conferred on the Trial Division by section 18 of the Federal Court Act and the procedure for its exercise is prescribed by Rule 603.
One will search in vain for any sign that the Court in the Adidas case ever adverted to the definition and its exception in section 2 of a "federal board, commission or other tribunal" which is the specific target for relief in section 18 proceedings, accord ing to that very section. One must wonder what section 18 relief in the nature of mandamus could be accorded against the applicant's competitor, Adidas, and to what claim for relief it could be called upon to respond in addition to the direct response of the properly impleaded deputy minis ter. With utmost respect to the learned Judges who composed that division of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Adidas case appears to have been decided per incuriam. In any event the putative respondent was not a body like a "federal board, commission or other tribunal", nor yet Sask. Water.
Indeed at page 385, the Court indicated that the particular "principles for joinder of parties which [Rule 1716] prescribes should be applied by analo gy pursuant to Rule 5". That Rule is thereupon recited:
Rule 5. In any proceeding in the Court where any matter arises not otherwise provided for by any provision in any Act of the Parliament of Canada or by any general rule or order of the Court (except this rule), the practice and procedure shall be determined by the Court (either on a preliminary motion for directions, or after the event if no such motion has been made) for the particular matter by analogy
(a) to the other provisions of these Rules, or
(b) to the practice and procedure in force for similar pro ceedings in the courts of that province to which the subject matter of the proceedings most particularly relates,
whichever is, in the opinion of the Court, most appropriate in the circumstances. [Emphasis not in original text.]
Clearly, as Rule 5 itself states, it cannot be invoked where any matter arises which is other wise provided for by any provision in any Act of Parliament. That Sask. Water cannot be sued pursuant to section 18 is indeed provided in section 2 of the Federal Court Act, a genuine Act of Parliament. It needs no great elaboration to assert that any rule of Court which is, operates or is interpreted to be, repugnant or otherwise contra-
dictory to an Act of Parliament is, to such extent, an ultra vires rule of Court.
As for Rule 1716, it provides for the joinder of parties in an action, as noted at page 734 of Federal Court Practice 1990, Sgayias, Kinnear, Rennie & Saunders (Carswell) and it "applies only to actions and not to motions or other pro ceedings." Cited in support are: Canadian Red Cross Society v. Simpsons Limited, [1983] 2 F.C. 372 (T.D.) (Mahoney J. [as he then was]); Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1986] 2 F.C. 233 (T.D.) (Walsh J.), upheld unanimously with out written reasons by the Appeal Division (Heald, Urie & Mahoney JJ.A.), (1986), 10 C.P.R. (3d) 288. Rule 1716 has no application in these pro ceedings pursuant to section 18 of the Federal Court Act.
There is a copious jurisprudence in this Court to the effect that no person can be added as a party respondent over whom the Court could have exer cised no jurisdiction in the first place. That propo sition seems to be abundantly obvious, for if the Court could not exercise jurisdiction over a person or corporation ab initio and therefore could not give an appropriate remedy in favour of the appli cant, the proposed respondent can hardly be winked or wished under the Court's jurisdiction even if it asks to be impleaded as a respondent as does Sask. Water in this instance.
The obvious consequence of attempting to imp- lead a party over whom the Court can exercise no jurisdiction can be seen in Union Oil Co. of Canada Ltd. v. The Queen, [1976] 1 F.C. 74 (C.A.) which the Supreme Court of Canada upheld with costs [1976] 2 S.C.R. v. So also was the result in the section 18 application of Carruth- ers v. Therapeutic Abortion Committees, [1983] 2 F.C. 581 (T.D.) (Collier J.), upheld unanimously on appeal, (1983), 6 D.L.R. (4th) 57, where Mr. Justice Heald wrote (at pages 63-64):
It is clear from the record that the entity which created the T.A.C. is the board of directors of the hospital through a resolution of the board. The board of directors derives its
overall authority from the provincial legislation and its resolu tions are authorized by the general law governing societies. Thus, t agree with the trial judge when he said that: "The authority, under which the therapeutic abortion committee acts and the mechanisms of setting it up, comes from provincial law." I also agree with counsel for the respondent that when one is considering the exception to the definition of "federal board, commission or other tribunal" in s. 2 of the Federal Court Act, the question of the powers of the tribunal are not in issue since to bring the subject tribunal within that definition initially, the exercise or purported exercise of federal powers is a condition precedent. I have therefore concluded that the appellants' submissions on this issue must be rejected.
I find no substance in [counsel's further constitutional] sub mission. The T.A.C. is constituted, established and functions under the law of the Province of British Columbia and more specifically, pursuant to provisions in two provincial statutes, the Societies Act and the Hospitals Act. The regulation and control of hospitals is clearly a provincial matter. The general subject of the performing of abortions is also a provincial matter subject to any prohibitions of the criminal law. Accord ingly, I find no constitutional impediment to the appointment of therapeutic abortion committees by the boards of directors of hospitals in a province.
For all of the above reasons, I have concluded that the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
There that committee, and here Sask. Water, are not federal boards, commissions or other tribunals because they are specifically exempted from the definition of such, by unambiguous words in sec tion 2 of the Federal Court Act.
The same consequence came about in Martinoff v. Gossen, [1978] 2 F.C. 537 (T.D.), (Collier J.), affirmed without written reasons by the Appeal Division as reported at (1979), 46 C.C.C. (2d) 368n. And so it was similarly in Halco Inc. v. Sandrin Brothers (1968) Ltd., A-582-85 (February 17, 1986) where Mr. Justice Hugessen said for the unanimous Court, in an action where the same principle emerged [at pages 1-2]:
Respondent has sued for damages resulting from a fire occurring during certain repair work carried out by appellant on respondent's ship. Appellant alleges that the damage was due to a faulty fire extinguisher supplied to the ship by Toronto Fire Control Company Limited. The Trial Division refused appellant's application to have Toronto Fire Control joined as a party defendant, hence the present appeal.
Appellant applied to add Toronto Fire Control as a defend ant pursuant to Rule 1716 because, according to counsel, there
might be a jurisdictional problem, in proceeding in the more usual way and taking third party proceedings against that company pursuant to Rule 1726.
We cannot agree with this reasoning. If indeed there is a jurisdictional problem as between defendant and Toronto Fire Control such as to prevent third party proceedings being taken in this Court, exactly the same problem would prevent Toronto Fire Control from being added as a defendant. The form of proceedings cannot cure perceived defects of jurisdiction.
So one is left in a situation where the law, section 2 of the Act, is crystal clear, but it does not do justice to the true holder of a federal licence, Sask. Water, because the latter is excluded as a respondent by that crystal clear law.
Sask. Water should be permitted to join in these proceedings in order to defend its federal licence, and to appeal if it be so inclined, against any order which impinges upon the rights accorded to it under its federal licence. It would attorn to the jurisdiction of this Court, if only the very words of the Act of Parliament did not specifically forbid it and exclude it. Although the Federal Court Act has recently been before Parliament for consider ation, the situation presented here in the burgeon ing field of federal environmental law, could per haps merit special and immediate further consideration.
In this situation the Court will once again accord intervenor status to Sask. Water. Sask. Water has, by counsel, undertaken to pay any costs awarded against it. This much was concluded at the outset of the hearing.
In the absence of any specific rule, however, that the applicants should be liable to pay costs to Sask. Water, when their section 18 application is properly framed only against the Minister, and it is only as against the Minister that they could be accorded section-18-type relief, the Tetzlaff broth ers shall not be liable to pay any of Sask. Water's costs. This is a makeshift situation.
Rule 5 permits the Court in such a situation of intervention by necessity (but not otherwise, by section 2's exclusion provided in the Act), to deter-
mine the practice and procedure by analogy to the other provisions of these Rules or, here, to the Saskatchewan practice. Although asked by the Court to do so, counsel has not directed the Court's attention to the analogous practice and procedure in force in Saskatchewan, but indicates that no specific jurisprudence was found except on control of the Court's own process.
In Fishing Vessel Owners' Assn. of B.C. v. A.G. Can. (1985), 1 C.P.C. (2d) 312, Mr. Justice Addy, on motion to the Appeal Division of this Court, invoked Rule 5 to permit the Pacific Gillnetters Association to intervene for the purposes of an appeal from an interlocutory order. Addy J. made the analogy with Rule 1010, an admiralty rule permitting intervention in an action in rem.
Paragraph (3) provides:
Rule 1010....
(3) By an order under this Rule, or a subsequent order adding to or changing the directions therein, the Court shall define the intervenor's rights to take part in the action.
In addition to the intervention on the same terms as in the original section 18 proceedings in Novem- ber, 1989, the Court now, by a subsequent order, will define Sask. Water's rights to take part in these proceedings by adding the right to appeal an adverse order impinging upon its rights accorded by its federal licence.
The Court fully recognizes the ad hoc nature of this disposition which in effect circumvents (at Sask. Water's request, of course) the Court's clear, specific, statutory absence of jurisdiction to countenance the impleading of Sask. Water, a "body constituted or established by or under a law of a province", in these section 18 proceedings where no relief can be claimed from or accorded against Sask. Water. This sort of problem should be solved by legislation. In any event, unless this definition of Sask. Water's rights to take part in this litigation be struck down by the Appeal Divi sion, which, after all has defied the provision defin ing "federal board, commission or other tribunal" already on behalf of this intervenor, then Sask. Water's extraordinary difficulty with Parliament's
clear unambiguous legislative text will be assuaged for this present litigation. This disposition will not necessarily avail should Sask. Water seek further leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada: Corporation of the City of Toronto v. Morencie, [1989] 1 S.C.R. vii.
The above disposition may seem, to some, a distinction without a difference. In some sense it is a semantic solution, but semantic or not all judges of both divisions of the Court are sworn to uphold the rule of law, and that means that the judges cannot simply defy a statutory imperative which they think inconvenient, even if it is inconvenient, and in the circumstances, productive of unfortu nate consequences.
In exercising its inherent jurisdiction to control its own discretionary process and proceedings here, the Court recognizes that there are few, if any, precedents in this particular field of cross-jurisdic tional, federal environmental law. Yet, even if the Federal Court Act be not amended to regulate the problem identified here, which the applicants do not recognize as such, this should be the last occasion on which the Court's discretion ought to be exercised in this ad hoc manner. What ought to transpire in future matters in which the federal licensee is immunized from section 18 proceedings, as is Sask. Water here, is what follows. The appli cants either spontaneously, or upon direction by the Court, ought to serve the licensee with copies of their section 18 process in a timely fashion. Then the licensee, if so advised, could itself com mence a parallel section 18 proceeding against the federal authority for, say, mandamus or prohibi tion composed or configured in an appropriate formulation limited only by the gifts of imagina tion, resilience and resourcefulness of the licensee's counsel. The licensee would simultaneously seek to have its section 18 application heard at the same time as the applicants' motion. In such circum stances, the immune licensee would be an original full party, an applicant, in its own right and the problem identified here would be obviated. Does that seem awkward and circuitous? It is: but
unless the Act be reformed it is better to light a candle than to curse the darkness.
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