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Northern and Central Gas Corporation Limited, Union Gas Company of Canada Limited and Consumers' Gas Company (Plaintiffs)
v.
National Energy Board and Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Limited (Defendants)
and
Attorney General of Canada (Intervenant)
Trial Division, Gibson J.—Ottawa, May 25, 26, 27, 28, June 11, 1971.
National Energy Board—Constitutional Law—Inter-pro vincial pipe line—Distributor selling gas in one Province— Power of National Energy Board to fix pipe line transmis sion tolls—Whether interference with property and civil rights in Province—Whether regulatory power retrospec- tive—B.N.A. Act, s. 91(2), (29), 92(10)(a)—National Energy Board Act, 1959 (Can.), c. 46, secs. 50, 51.
Plaintiffs purchased natural gas from a pipe line company under contracts made in 1956 and subsequently. The gas was transmitted by the pipe line company through its pipe lines from Alberta and delivered to plaintiffs in Ontario, and was sold and delivered by plaintiffs to their customers in Ontario. The price paid by plaintiffs to the pipe line compa ny for the gas was not broken down between a transmission charge and a price for the gas. In August 1969 the pipe line company applied to the National Energy Board under s. 97(1) of the National Energy Board Act to make Part IV of the Act (secs. 50 to 61) apply to the pipe line company, and, under secs. 50 and 53, to fix tolls for gas sold by it in Canada. On October 30, 1969, the Board by order made the Act applicable to all persons operating pipe lines when the Act came into force (Nov. 2, 1959). On Nov. 5, 1970, the pipe line company applied to the Board for an order fixing interim tolls.
Held: (1) Although the power to regulate a pipe line operator's transmission charges affected plaintiffs' property and civil rights, the federal legislation was intra vires as being a valid exercise of Parliament's legislative jurisdiction with respect to trade and commerce (s. 91(2) B.N.A. Act) and with respect to inter-provincial works and undertakings (s. 91(29) and 92(10)(a)).
(2) The Board's power under s. 50 of the National Energy Board Act to set the selling price of gas was not limited to contracts executed after October 30, 1969, the date on which the Act became applicable to the pipe line company, but extended to contracts executed before that date.
ACTION for declaration.
C. L. Drouin, Q. C., for Union Gas Co. of Canada Ltd. and Northern and Central Gas Corp., plaintiffs.
H. Soloway, Q.C., F. Lamar and M. J. O'Grady for National Energy Board, defendant.
G. D. Finlayson, Q.C. and J. H. Francis for Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., defendant.
B. J. MacKinnon, Q.C., and J. E. Sexton for Consumers' Gas Co., plaintiff.
C. R. O. Munro, Q.C., for Attorney General of Canada, intervenant.
GIBSON J.—These six actions were tried together. In three of the actions the defendant is the Attorney General of Canada and in the other three actions the defendants are the National Energy Board and Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Limited and the Attorney General of Canada is a party as intervenor.
The plaintiffs in the actions in which the Attorney General of Canada is the defendant alone, seek a declaration that:
... Sections 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 61 and 97(1) of the National Energy Board Act are ultra vires the Federal Parliament insofar as they purport to regulate or grant the power to regulate the price of natural gas sold and delivered exclu sively within a province.
The plaintiffs in the other three actions claim:
A declaration that the National Energy Board has no jurisdiction to interfere in any respect with the prices and rates presently in force in the contracts between the plain tiff and the defendant, Trans-Canada Pipe Lines, and that there is no tariff affecting the plaintiff within the meaning of the Act, and that it cannot establish such prices under its governing Act for the future; (and)
A declaration that sections 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 61 and 97(1) of the National Energy Board Act and Order MO-62- 69 of the Board, dated the 30th day of October, 1969, do not have retrospective effect and do not affect the prices fixed by the contracts aforesaid;
The plaintiffs in these latter actions also claimed other relief which was not asked for at this trial.
The parties agreed as to certain facts for the purpose of this trial.
In summary, this agreement was as follows:
1. The plaintiff, Northern and Central Gas Corp. Ltd., is a company incorporated under the laws of the Dominion of Canada with its head office at Toronto, Ontario, and the plain tiff, the Consumers' Gas Co. and the plaintiff, Union Gas Co. of Canada Ltd., are Ontario companies having their respective head offices at Toronto and Chatham, Ontario.
2. The defendant Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. was incorporated by special Act of the Parliament of Canada 15 Geo VI, c. 92, as amended by special Act 2-3 Eliz. II, c. 80, and special Act 16-17 Eliz. II, c. 46.
3. The defendant National Energy Board was established by Part I of the National Energy Board Act, S. of C. 1959, c. 46, as amended.
4. In or about the year 1956 the Consumers' Gas Co., in or about the year 1957 Northern and Central Gas Corp. Ltd., and in or about the year 1959 Union Gas Co. of Canada Ltd. respectively commenced purchasing from Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. large quantities of natural gas owned by Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. under several contracts.
5. All of the plaintiffs take delivery of their natural gas purchases from the defendant Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. in various places in Ontario and they sell and deliver the natural gas to their respective customers in Ontario. (There is one exception, in the case of the Consumers' Gas Co. which sells some gas to an associated company of it in Hull, Quebec.) (It is specifically provided in these several contracts that title to the gas does not pass from Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. until it is delivered to the plaintiffs; and all of such places of delivery are solely within the Province of Ontario.)
6. On August 14, 1969, the defendant Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. made an application for
an order under s. 97(1) of the National Energy Board Act (hereinafter called the Act) to have Part IV of the Act apply to it. In addition, it sought orders from the Board to fix "the just and reasonable rates or tolls" which it could charge with respect to gas sold by it in Canada, and "disallow any existing tariff or tolls or portion thereof which were inconsistent with the just and reasonable rates or tolls so fixed". The application was brought under secs. 50 and 53 of the Act.
7. On October 30, 1969, the National Energy Board by Board Order No. MO-62-69 declared Part IV of the Act applied to "every person who on the day the Act came into force was operating a pipe line". Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. was so operating on November 2, 1959, the date the Act came into force.
8. On November 5, 1970, the defendant Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. applied to the Board for an order fixing interim tolls.
9. The plaintiffs have delivered and filed sub missions and interventions to both of the said applications by the said defendant.
10. Section 61 of the Act was repealed and a new s. 61 substituted therefor by chapter 52, S. of C. 1960-61 which received Royal Assent and came into force July 13, 1961.
11. Section 51 of the Act was amended and a new subsec. (2) added thereto by chapter 65, S. of C. 1969-70 which received Royal Assent and came into force June 26, 1970.
12. The hearings on both applications com menced on February 9, 1971, and are still proceeding.
13. The defendant Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. filed with the defendant Board copies of the several contracts as between it and the several plaintiffs referred to above on or about the following dates'.
In the Province of Alberta, there is and was at all material times a Board called the Alberta Gas and Oil Conservation Board. Among other things, it issues permits for the export of gas from Alberta after a determination that such gas is surplus to Alberta's present and future needs.
Since 1964, there has been established also in the Province of Ontario a Board called the Ontario Energy Board. At s. 19 of the Act establishing that Board, namely, the Ontario Energy Board Act, 1964, (Ont.), c. 74 as amended, that Board is given power "Subject to the regulations, ... (to) make orders approving or fixing just and reasonable rates and other charges for the sale of gas by transmitters, distributors and storage companies, and for the transmission, distribution and storage of gas".
The following sections of the National Energy Board Act are relevant in this case, namely:
2. In this Act
(a) "Board" means the National Energy Board;
(c) "company" means a person having authority under a Special Act to construct or operate pipe lines;
(g) "import" means, with reference to gas or oil, to bring into Canada through pipe lines, by railway tank car, by tank truck or by tanker;
(m) "pipe line" means a line for the transmission of gas or oil connecting a province with any other or others of the provinces, or extending beyond the limits of a province, and includes all branches, extensions, tanks, reservoirs, storage facilities, pumps, racks, compressors, loading facilities, interstation systems of communication by tele phone, telegraph or radio, and real and personal property and works connected therewith;
(q) "Special Act" means
(i) an Act of the Parliament of Canada that authorizes a person named in the Act to construct or operate a pipe line or that is enacted with special reference to a pipe line that a person is by such an Act authorized to construct or operate, and
(ii) letters patent issued under section 5A or 50 of the Canada Corporations Act, except for the purpose of paragraph (b) of section 80;
(r) "toll" includes any toll, rate, charge or allowance charged or made for the shipment, transportation, trans mission, care, handling or delivery of hydrocarbons, or for storage or demurrage or the like.
97. (1) Part IV of this Act does not apply to any person who, on the day this Act comes into force, is operating a pipe line, until the Board so orders.
(As appears in the agreement as to facts, the Board ordered that Part IV applied to Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. on October 30, 1969.)
91. The Board shall within three months after the 31st day of December in each year submit to the Minister a report on the activities of the Board under this Act for that year, and the Minister shall cause the report to be laid before Parliament within fifteen days after the receipt there of or, if Parliament is not then sitting, on any of the first fifteen days next thereafter that Parliament is sitting.
(This Act came into force on November 2, 1959.)
(Part IV of the Act which is entitled "Traffic, Tolls and Tariffs" contains secs. 50 to 61.)
50. The Board may make orders with respect to all mat ters relating to traffic, tolls or tariffs.
51. (1) A company shall not charge any tolls except tolls specified in a tariff that has been filed with the Board and is in effect.
(2) Where the gas transmitted by a company through its pipe line is the property of the company, the company shall file with the Board, upon the making thereof, true copies of all the contracts it may make for the sale of gas and amendments from time to time made thereto, and the true copies so filed shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Part, to constitute a tariff pursuant to subsection (1).
(Section 51(2) of the Act came into force on June 26, 1970.)
52. All tolls shall be just and reasonable, and shall always, under substantially similar circumstances and con ditions with respect to all traffic of the same description carried over the same route, be charged equally to all persons at the same rate.
53. The Board may disallow any tariff or any portion thereof that it considers to be contrary to any of the provisions of this Act or to any order of the Board, and may require a company, within a prescribed time, to substitute a tariff satisfactory to the Board in lieu thereof, or may
prescribe other tariffs in lieu of the tariff or portion thereof so disallowed.
55. A company shall not make any unjust discrimination in tolls, service or facilities against any person or locality.
60. Where the Board finds such action necessary or desirable in the public interest, it may direct a company operating a pipe line for the transmission of gas to extend or improve its transmission facilities to provide facilities for the junction of its pipe line with anÿ facilities of, and sell gas to, any person or municipality engaged or legally author ized to engage in the local distribution of gas to the public, and for such purposes to construct branch lines to com munities immediately adjacent to its pipe line, if the Board finds that no undue burden will be placed upon the compa ny thereby, but the Board has no power to compel a company to sell gas to additional customers if to do so would impair its ability to render adequate service to its existing customers.
61. Where the gas transmitted by a company through its pipe line is the property of the company, the differential between the cost to the company of the gas at the point where it enters its pipe line and the amount for which the gas is sold by the company shall, for the purposes of this Part, be deemed to be a toll charged by the company to the purchaser for the transmission thereof.
(Section 61 came into force in its present form on July 13, 1961.)
(In connection with this latter section, none of the several contracts above referred to and filed at this trial show the cost of the transmis sion of the gas, that is the differential between the cost to Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. of the gas at the point where it enters its pipe line and the amount for which the gas is sold by it to the several plaintiffs.)
62. (1) A company may, for the purposes of its undertak ing, subject to the provisions of this Act and its Special Act,
(h) transmit hydrocarbons by pipe line and regulate the time and manner in which hydrocarbons shall be transmit ted, and the tolls to be charged therefor; and
In addition, and relevant in this case, Part I of the Schedule to the National Energy Board Rules of Practice and Procedure, which pre scribes the information required to be filed by
an applicant for a certificate in respect of a gas pipe line, at paragraph 11 (ii) requires the appli cant to file a proforma statement of estimated revenues and expenses for the applicant's pipe line system for the first, third and fifth years following the issuance of the proposed certifi cate indicating among other things the "pur- chase cost of the gas".
Also, s. 2(2) of the Gas Pipe Line Uniform Accounting Regulations established by P.C. 1969-1792 under the authority of the National Energy Board Act requires "every gas pipe line company that is subject to the jurisdic tion of the Board ... unless otherwise author ized, (to) follow the accounting instructions set out in these Regulations". These regulations are very detailed.
The plaintiffs' witnesses at this trial were George W. Carpenter, executive vice-president and general manager of the Consumers' Gas Co.; Robert Glenn Caughey, Director of Gas Supply Union Gas Supply Co. of Canada; and Mr. R. Johnson, rate supervisor of Northern and Central Gas Corp. Ltd.
The Attorney General of Canada adduced no evidence.
The National Energy Board filed as Ex. 10 the transcript of the first day of evidence before the National Energy Board on February 9, 1971, as Ex. 11 a copy of an order of the National Energy Board dated June 18, 1970, and as Ex. 12 a copy of an order of the Nation al Energy Board dated December 17, 1970.
Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd.'s only witness was Mr. Vernon Hortie, president of that company.
The evidence established that Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. owns the pipe lines as shown on Ex. 5. There are pipe lines for the transmission of gas from Alberta through Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec and into the State of Vermont, U.S.A. Through their pipe lines also, at Emerson, Manitoba, Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. delivers gas to a pipe line
company associated with it by the name of Great Lakes Transmission Gas Co. That compa ny transmits the gas through its pipe lines through the States of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan and into Ontario, connecting at the town of Dawn in Ontario with the pipe line owned by the plaintiff the Union Gas Co. of Canada Ltd.
The evidence also established that Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. buys its gas in the Province of Alberta, the purchase of which is as yet not subject to any order of any board, either provincial or federal; that it takes delivery of such gas into its pipe line at a point on the Alberta-Saskatchewan border; that it delivers all its gas through its own pipe line system; that it sells the gas it so delivers at various points in the Provinces of Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario and in the State of Vermont, U.S.A.; that the plaintiff purchasers by the said several contracts which have been filed at this trial and with the Board, pay Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. for the transmission of the gas as a carrier and for the gas in one sum, and that there is no breakdown in such sum as between the charge for transmission of the gas and the charge for the gas itself.
As stated, Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. in its said application to the National Energy Board seeks orders from that Board to fix "the just and reasonable rates or tolls" which it can charge with respect to gas sold by it in Canada, and also to "disallow any existing tariff or tolls or portion thereof which were inconsistent with the just and reasonable rates or tolls so fixed".
The National Energy Board by s. 50 of the National Energy Board Act is empowered to "make orders with respect to all matters relat ing to traffic, tolls or tariffs". Presumably, a tariff for the purpose of that section is a list of tolls.
A toll is defined, as referred to above, in s. 2(r) of the Act and includes "any toll, rate, charge or allowance charged or made for the ... transmission, care, handling or delivery of
hydrocarbons, or for storage or demurrage or the like"; and an extended definition of toll is contained in s. 61 where it is provided that "the differential between the cost to the company of the gas at the point where it enters its pipe line and the amount for which the gas is sold by the company shall, for the purposes of this Part, (i.e. Part IV) be deemed to be a toll charged by the company to the purchaser for the transmis sion thereof".
By reason of s. 51(1), every company subject to the Act, as is Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., is prohibited from charging "any tolls except tolls specified in a tariff that has been filed with the Board and is in effect".
Then by reason of s. 51(2) of the Act which came into force June 26, 1970, there is this provision which applies to all companies like Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. who in addition to providing transmission or carrier services, also own the gas and sell the gas which they transmit through their own pipe lines to wit,
51. (1)...
(2) Where the gas transmitted by a company through its pipe line is the property of the company, the company shall file with the Board, upon the making thereof, true copies of all the contracts it may make for the sale of gas and amendments from time to time made thereto, and the true copies so filed shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Part, to constitute a tariff pursuant to subsection (1).
Most of the contracts the plaintiffs have entered into with Trans-Canada Pipe Lines as above noted, were entered into prior to June 26, 1970. These contracts may or may not be con tracts within the meaning of s. 51(2) of the Act.
Then at s. 52, it is provided that toll charges must be just and reasonable without discrimina tion to any consumer; and then it is provided in s. 53 of the Act that the Board "may disallow any tariff or any portion thereof that it consid ers to be contrary to any of the provisions of this Act or to any order of the Board" and in addition, it may after disallowance "require a company, within a prescribed time, to substitute a tariff satisfactory to the Board in lieu thereof,
or may prescribe other tariffs in lieu of the tariff or portion thereof so disallowed".
The Court had the benefit of exhaustive sub missions by all parties.
The plaintiffs' positions in brief were as follows:
1. The sale of gas in Ontario made pursuant to contracts entered into by them with Trans- Canada Pipe Lines in Ontario was a matter of property and civil rights within the Province and a matter of local or private nature in the Province and that as a consequence, in their view, "the attempted application of the legisla tion and/or its terms to the (plaintiffs) ... and Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., present and future, is an interference with property and civil rights within the Province and matters local and provincial". (Section 92(13) and (16) of the B.N.A. Act.)
A
(i) Caloil Inc. v. A.G. Can. (1971) 15 D.L.R. (3d) 164, Jackett P. at pp. 172-73, 175-76; (ii) Caloil Inc. v. A.G. Can. (May 10, 1971) S.C.R.; (iii) A.G. B.C. v. A.G. Can. [1937] A.C. 377 Lord Atkin at pp. 386-87; (iv) The King v. Eastern Terminal Elevator Co. [1925] S.C.R. 434, Duff J. at pp. 446-48; (v) Re: Farm Prod ucts Marketing Act [1957] S.C.R. 198; Kerwin C.J. at p. 204; Rand J. at pp. 203, 212-13; Fauteux J. (as he then was) at p. 256; (vi) Carnation Co. v. Que. Agricul tural Marketing Bd. [1968] S.C.R. 238 Martland J. (for the Court) at pp. 253-54; (vii) Home Oil Distributors Ltd. v. A.G. B.C. [1940] S.C.R. 444 Crocket J. at p. 448, Davis J. at p. 451, Hudson J. at p. 455.
B
(i) Campbell-Bennett Ltd. v. Comstock [1954] S.C.R. 207 (see now s. 79 of the National Energy Board Act);
(ii) Montreal v. Montreal Street Rly. [1912] A.C. 333 at p. 346; (iii) Re: Radio Communications [1932] A.C. 304, Lord Dunedin at p. 315.
2. In any event, the National Energy Board Act should not be given retrospective effect so as to permit interference with contractual or other existing rights.
(i) Maxwell on the Interpretation of Statutes 11th ed., pp. 204-06; 12th ed., pp. 215-16; (ii) Craies on Statute Law, 5th ed., pp. 357-58, 360-61, 369; (iii) Schmidt v. Ritz (1901) 31 S.C.R. 602, Strong J. at pp. 605-06; (iv) Spooner Oils Ltd. v. Turner Valley Gas Conservation Bd. [1933] S.C.R. 629, Duff C.J. at p. 638; (v) In Re Athlumney [1898] 2 Q.B. 547, Wright J. at p. 551; (vi) Pitcher v. Shoebottom [1971] 1 O.R. 106, Lieff J. at p. 113; (vii) Queen v. Walker (1970) 11 D.L.R. (3d) 173, Martland J. at p. 186; (viii) Gloucester v. Ottawa [1940] O.W.N. 524 (C.A.) at p. 529; (ix) West v. Gwynne [1911] 2 Ch. 1 at 10.
3. A proper interpretation of secs. 50, 51, 60, 61 and 97 of the National Energy Board Act will establish that these sections, and in fact all of the sections of the whole Act, by their very terms, do not deal with the sale of gas, but instead deal with the transmission of gas and other hydrocarbons and therefore the National Energy Board, among other things, is empow ered only to deal with carrier charges for such transmission for this inter-provincial company Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., and nowhere in any of the sections of the Act is it empowered to deal with the price to be paid for the sale of gas.
Counsel for the Attorney General of Canada did not rely, for the validity of the National Energy Board Act, on the federal commerce power. (Section 91(2) of the B.N.A. Act.) Instead, he relied on the subject-matter of the legislation being in relation to a federal work or undertaking. (Section 91(29) and s. 92(10) of the B.N.A. Act.)
The submission was that this legislation was directed solely to charges for the transmission of gas and other hydrocarbons through inter- provincial pipe lines; that these transmission charges are imposed in two ways, namely, first ly in the situation where the gas carried in the pipe line is owned by the pipe line owner and secondly in the situation where the gas in the pipe line is owned by some other person than the pipe line owner; that because Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. was in the former category, the Board in setting a charge for the transmission of
gas must include in any such charge the selling price of the gas and the only person that this charge can be imposed upon in the subject case is the purchaser of the gas; or in other words, the power of the Board to fix tolls or charges in this situation affects the price of gas but that the fact that it affects it does not make the enabling legislation ultra vires the federal gov ernment so long as the legislation is within a matter of valid federal jurisdiction.
In sum, the submission was that the Board's jurisdiction in respect to the matter of the said application before it by Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. was a matter in relation to an inter- provincial undertaking within the meaning of head (10)(a) of s. 92 and s. 91(29) of the British North America Act and not a matter of proper ty and civil rights in the Province or of a merely private or local matter in the Province within the meaning of heads (13) and (16) of s. 92 of the British North America Act.
1. Caloil Inc. v. A.G. Can. Supreme Court of Canada (unreported); 2. The Queen v. Board of Transport Com'rs. [1968] S.C.R. 118; 3. Campbell-Bennett v. Trans Mountain Oil Pipe Line Co. [1954] S.C.R. 207; 4. Gold Seal Ltd. v. A.G. Alta, 62 S.C.R. 424; 5. Toronto v. Bell Telephone Co. [1905] A.C. 52; 6. Winner v. S.M.T. (Eastern) Ltd. [1954] A.C. 541.
Counsel for the National Energy Board, among other things, submitted that there were tariffs and tolls in existence as of October 30, 1969, within the meaning of Part IV of the National Energy Board Act, and in particular s. 53 thereof, but even if there were none, the National Energy Board still had power to exer cise jurisdiction in respect to the same under s. 51(2) of the Act; that the Act does not purport to give the Board power to regulate the sale of gas but only power to make orders with respect to all matters "relating to traffic, tolls or tariffs"; that the fact that the exercise of such regulatory powers may affect certain contracts between the plaintiffs and Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. which have been entered into before Part IV of the Act was declared in force by the Board (pursuant to its enabling powers in s. 97(1) of the Act), is not material to the issue; that s. 51(2) of the Act is purely administrative and gives sanction to the practice of the Board
up to the time of the passing of that subsection; and that "rate fixing contracts between private parties, even when entered into prior to the enactment of public utility legislation, cannot prevail against the legislation when it comes into force";
Ottawa Electric Rly. v. Ottawa and Canada Atlantic Rly. [1906] S.C.R. 354; Grand Trunk Rly. and C.P.R. v. Toronto [1909] S.C.R. 613; Maritime Electric Co. v. General Dairies Ltd. [1937] A.C. 610, 1 All E.R. 748; Union Dry Goods Co. v. Georgia Public Service Corp. (1919) 248 U.S. 372; Washington v. Public Service Com'n (1921) 129 N.E. 459; Producers Transportation Co. v. Rr. Com'n of Cal. (1919) 251 U.S. 228; Re: Highland Telephone Corp. (1921) PUR 162; Market Street Rly. v. Pacific Gas and Electric Co. [1926] A. 509;
that on a proper interpretation of the National Energy Board Act it is remedial legislation establishing a comprehensive regulatory scheme, and Parliament must have intended to bring existing contractual arrangements within its scope.
Sections 97(2); 58(1); 52; 53; 54; 55; 56; 61; and most importantly s. 51(1); Maxwell on Statutes, 12th ed. 1959, pp. 215 ff, middle p. 216; Interpretation Act, 1967-68, c. 7, s. 11; West v. Gwynne [1911] 2 Ch. 1; 80 L.J. Ch. 578; Acme Village v. Steele-Smith [1933] S.C.R. 47; Tomashaysky v. Nichols (1955) 16 W.W.R. 598; A.G. Can. v. Compagnie de Publication La Presse Ltée. (1966) 63 D.L.R. (2d) 396; Grand Trunk Rly. v. Hepworth Silica Pressed Brick Co. (1919) 51 S.C.R. 81, per Davies J. at p. 85; B.C. Elec. Rly. v. Public Utilities Com'n of B.C. [1960] S.C.R. 837; Edmonton v. North western Utilities Ltd. [1961] S.C.R. 392; Spooner Oils Ltd. v. Turner Valley Gas Conservation Bd. [1933] S.C.R. 629.
Counsel for Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. as to the submission in respect to the constitution al issues relating to the validity of the National Energy Board Act, submitted that the Act could be upheld under the federal commerce power (s. 91(2) of the B.N.A. Act) and also as the exercise of the power over an inter-provincial work or undertaking (s. 91(29) and s. 92(10)(a) of the B.N.A. Act).
Re: the exercise of power over an inter-pro vincial work or undertaking: (Section 91(29) as read with s. 92(10)(a) of the B.N.A. Act.)
Campbell-Bennett Ltd. v. Comstock Mid-western Ltd. [1954] S.C.R. 297 and particularly Kerwin J. speaking for himself and Fauteux J. (as he then was) at p. 211; also Rand J. speaking for himself, Kellock, Locke and Cartwright J.J. at p. 214; Grand Trunk Rly. v. A.G. Can. [1907] A.C. 65; Toronto v. Bell Telephone Co. [1905] A.C. 52 and particularly at p. 59; Re: Regulation of Radio [1932] A.C. 304 and particularly at p. 315; A.G. Ont. v. Winner [1954] A.C. 541 and particularly at pp. 580-83; MacDonald v. Riordon (1899) 8 Que. Q.B. 555 affirmed (1899) 30 S.C.R. 619 and particularly the decision of Mr. Justice Wurtele of the Quebec Court of Queen's Bench at pp. 573-74; Re: Industrial Relations and Disputes Investigation Act [1955] 3 D.L.R. 721 and particularly Kellock J. at p. 749; The Queen v. Bd. of Transport Com'rs (1968) 65 D.L.R. (2nd) at p. 425, a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada and particu larly at pp. 432-34.
Re: Federal Commerce power: (Section 91(2) of the B.N.A. Act.)
Citizens Ins. Co. v. Parsons (1881) 7 App. Cas. 96, and particularly Sir Montague Smith at pp. 112-13; Re: Natural Products Marketing Act [1936] S.C.R. 398 as affirmed by the Privy Council in [1937] A.C. 327; Re: Section 5(a) Dairy Industry Act [1949] S.C.R. 1; P.E.I. Potato Marketing Bd. v. H.B. Willis Inc. [1952] 2 S.C.R. 392; Murphy v. C.P.R. [1958] S.C.R. 626; Re: Farm Products Marketing Act [1957] S.C.R. 198; 7 D.L.R. (2d) 257 particularly with reference to Rand J. at pp. 271-72, Kerwin C.J. at p. 264 and again at pp. 264-65 and 266; A.G. Can. v. C.P.R. [1958] S.C.R. 285; G.W. Saddlery Co. v. The King [1921] 2 A.C. 91; The Queen v. Klassen (1959) 20 D.L.R. (2d) 406; Krickard v. A.G. B.C. (1958) 14 D.L.R. (2d) 58; Public Utilities Com'n v. Victoria Cablevision Ltd. (1965) 51 D.L.R. (2d) 716; Re: Radio Communication [1932] A.C. 304; Carnation Co. Ltd. v. Que. Agricultural Marketing Bd. [1968] S.C.R. 238.
As to the sufficiency of the National Energy Board Act to confer jurisdiction upon the National Energy Board, counsel for Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. submitted the following authorities :
Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes 11th ed. at p. 206; West v. Gwynne [1911] 2 Ch. p. 1 and particularly
Buckley Li. at p. 11; G.T.R. and C.P.R. v. Toronto [1910] 42 S.C.R. 613 and particularly Davies J. at p. 627; Montreal Street Rly. v. Montreal Terminal Rly. (1905) 36 S.C.R. 369; Ottawa Elec. Rly. v. Ottawa (1906) 37 S.C.R. 354 and particularly Davies J. at p. 359; B.C. Elec. Rly. v. Public Utilities Com'n of B.C. [1960] S.C.R. 837; Munn v. Illinois (1877) 94 U.S. 113; Railroad Com'n v. Permian Basin Pipeline 302 S.W. (2d) 238-54 also cited in H.R. Williams' edition Oil and Gas at Vol. 4, 1962, p. 802; Re: Northwestern Utilities Ltd. v. Northwestern Utilities Ltd. (1960) 25 D.L.R. (2d) 262 as affirmed in the Supreme Court of Canada [1961] S.C.R. 392; B.C. Elec. Rly. v. Public Utilities Com'n of B.C. [1960] S.C.R. 837 and particularly Mart- land J. at p. 853 and Locke J. at p. 843; Bluefield Water Works Co. v. West Virginia Public Service Com'n (1923) 262 U.S. 679 at p. 690; Bd. of Public Utility Com'rs v. New York Tel. Co. (1925) 271 U.S. p. 23 at 31; Re: Northwestern Utilities Ltd. v. Northwestern Utilities Ltd. (1961) 25 D.L.R. (2d) 262 as affirmed (1961) S.C.R. 392 and particularly Locke J. at p. 402; Edmonton v. Northern Alberta Natural Gas Develop ment Co. (1920) 50 D.L.R. 506 which proceeded to the Supreme Court of Canada and is reported as Northern Alberta Natural Gas Development Co. v. A.G. Alta., 61 S.C.R. at p. 213; Gloucester v. Ottawa [1941] 1 D.L.R. 483 and as reported in the Supreme Court of Canada under the name Ottawa v. Eastview [ 1941] S.C.R. 448 at p. 459, Rinfret J. at p. 465.
As to the effect of the various clauses in the several contracts which state in various ways that the prices set out in the contracts are subject to regulation:
Oil and Gas Law, Vol. 4 p. 802 "The significance of these clauses etc.", edited by H.R. Williams and C.J. Meyers; United States District Court—Brooklyn deci sion, Public Utilities Reports ( 1927) A. 200.
The regulation of rates is within the police power of the State and such a power cannot be limited or impaired by contract.
Alabama Supreme Court—Salter v. Georgia—Alabama Utilities decision, Public Utilities Reports ( 1932) E. 333.
Rates prescribed by contract prior to the enactment of the Public Utility Act are nevertheless subject to the reasonable exercise of the police power of the State.
Florida Supreme Court—Southern Division, Public Utilities Reports ( 1924) C. 428.
Contracts must be understood as made in reference to the possible exercise of the rightful authority of
the government, and no obligation of the contract can extend to defeat the legitimate governmental authority.
Indiana Supreme Court—Washington v. Public Service Commission, Public Utilities Reports (1921) C. 459.
The mere fact that the legislature has not made regulations which prevent a rate contract from being valid at the time it is made will not enable the parties, by their private contract, to curtail or limit the future exercise of such power of the legislature, the con tract will be deemed to have been made subject to whatever future regulations might be imposed by law.
Indiana Supreme Court—Public Service Commission v. Girton, Public Utilities Reports (1921) P. 16.
Parties entering into contracts, prior to the exercise of the regulatory power of the State, are charged with knowledge of the fact that at some future time the State may, if it sees fit to exercise the right, affect the contract by its regulation.
Michigan Supreme Court—Highland Telephone Compa ny, Public Utilities Reports, (1921) C. 162.
No two or more individuals, associations, or corpora tion, or any combination of them can make a valid contract fixing rates and thus oust the state of its jurisdiction to control rates.
United States District Court—Market Street Railway Co. v. Pacific G and E, Public Utilities Reports, (1926) A. 509.
The State has power to annul and supersede rates previously established by contracts between utilities and their customers.
Keremos Land Co. v. MacTavish [1925] 1 D.L.R. 897 and particularly Morrison J. at p. 900; Maritime Elec tric Co. v. General Dairies Ltd. [1937] A.C. 610 and particularly Lord Maugham at p. 620.
As to the right of a Canadian court to look at American decisions, specific reference was made to:
The King v. Rideout [1949] 4 D.L.R. 612 and particu larly at p. 618; B.C. Elec. Rly. v. Public Utilities Com'n of B.C. [1960] S.C.R. 837 particularly the judgment of Locke J. at p. 844.
So much for the submission of counsel for the parties.
In reaching the conclusion that I do in this matter, I have accepted the following premises: (1) that the making of the several contracts between the plaintiffs and the defendant Trans-
Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. which were filed in evidence, is a matter which, generally speaking, comes within the classes of subjects assigned to the legislatures of the provinces under s. 92(13) and (16) of the B.N.A. Act; (2) that the majority of the said several contracts were entered into prior to the coming into force of Part IV of the National Energy Board Act, i.e., October 30, 1969; and (3) that title to the gas referred to in the said several contracts passes from Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. to the plaintiffs at delivery points which are all within the Prov ince of Ontario.
The full title of the Act under consideration in this case is An Act to provide for the estab lishment of a National Energy Board. On a reading of the whole of the Act and especially the provisions which have been quoted at the beginning of these reasons, it is probable that the matter in relation to which this Act was enacted was to regulate pipe line charges for the transmission and associated services of gas and all hydrocarbons.
It is a new type of legislation made necessary because of economic change in Canada which came about after the finding of enormous quan tities of gas in the Provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan, the existence of which had not been heretofore known.
The subject-matter of this legislation in the sense which I have stated does not come within any classes of subject which by s. 92 of the B.N.A Act were assigned exclusively to the legislatures of the Provinces.
Instead, the subject-matter of the National Energy Board Act is a subject-matter within both the federal commerce power (see s. 91(2) of the B.N.A Act) and also within the federal power to legislate in relation to inter-provincial works or undertakings (see s. 91(29) and s. 92(10)(a) of the B.N.A Act).
In relation to it being a matter within the federal commerce power, the National Energy Board Act gives to the National Energy Board, among other things, the power to regulate the charges to be levied by a pipe line common
carrier for the transmission of gas connecting a province with any other or others of the prov inces or existing beyond the limits of a prov ince. In addition, in the situation where such a pipe line common carrier as part of its business and inextricably connected with it also sells gas, power is also thereby given to the Board, in regulating such transmission charges, and in so far as the selling price of gas is a necessary part of such transmission charges, to regulate the price at which gas may be sold in Ontario. In other words, in so far as the incidental setting of the price at which gas may be sold in Ontario is part of its whole regulatory scheme of setting transmission charges, the Board in relation thereto is validly exercising ' the power con ferred upon it by s. 50 of the Act to "make orders with respect to all matters relating to traffic, tolls or tariffs".
As to this subject-matter being within the federal power to legislate in relation to an inter- provincial work or undertaking, the evidence established that the defendant Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., in so far as the subject-matter of this action is concerned, in carrying on its business as a pipe line common carrier which also owns and sells the gas it carries in its pipe line, carries on one single undertaking and not two separate and distinct businesses to wit, selling gas generally to the public and selling its services as a pipe line common carrier. In carry ing on such single undertaking, Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. conducts its business solely with members of the public who buy at the same time both its services as a pipe line common carrier and its gas.
The National Energy Board in exercising its regulatory powers, under the National Energy Board Act, over the charges to be levied by a pipe line common carrier such as Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. will undoubtedly affect the property and civil rights of the plaintiffs in the said several contracts which have been filed at this trial and which had been filed with the National Energy Board. But, notwithstanding, having determined that the matter in relation to which the National Energy Board Act was
passed is one which falls within the said powers of Parliament, the fact that implementing the powers given in such Act to the National Energy Board will affect- such property and civil rights is no objection to the validity of the Act. 2
In addition, in respect to the submissions about retrospectivity of the statute in relation to such of the said several contracts which were entered into prior to the coming into force of Part IV of the National Energy Board Act, I am of the view that the retrospective rule of statu tory interpretation is not relevant.
Instead what is relevant is the separate and distinct vested rights rule.'
The question here is whether the incidental power to set the selling price of gas given by s. 50 in Part IV of the National Energy Board Act to the National Energy Board relates to all contracts for the sale of gas or only some, namely, those executed after the coming into force of Part IV of the Act, that is, October 30, 1969. It is clear it relates to the former only. In other words, the question is as to the ambit and scope of s. 50, and not as to the date as from which Part IV of the Act is to be taken to have been the law.
As a result, if the National Energy Board, in exercising its powers under s. 50 of the Act, should as a result establish a higher selling price for gas than that originally stipulated between the parties in the said several contracts filed, it is not affecting the said contracts retrospective ly but instead only prospectively.
In the result, therefore, in respect to the application made by the defendant Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. on August 14, 1969, to the National Energy Board for orders to fix "the just and reasonable rates or tolls" which it could charge with respect to gas sold by it in Canada and to "disallow any existing tariff or tolls or portion thereof which were inconsistent with the just and reasonable rates or tolls so fixed", I am of the view, that the Board has power to do so under Part IV of the National
Energy Board Act and that in so far as the Board, if it should make such orders, may by such orders affect the selling price of gas pres ently obtaining between the plaintiffs and the defendant Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. pursu ant to the said several contracts filed at this trial and with the Board, it will not be acting beyond its jurisdiction and that the said jurisdiction in the National Energy Board Act it will invoke in so doing will be jurisdiction conferred on it intra vires the Government of Canada.
The actions are therefore dismissed with costs.
I The contracts numbering 29 in all between Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Limited and the various plaintiffs, were executed at different dates between January 18, 1955 and October 15, 1970. Copies of the contracts were filed with the Board at various dates between November 13, 1959 and January 7, 1971.—Ed.
2 See A.G. Sask. v. A.G. Can. [1949] A.C. 110 at 123 Rand J. "It is the true nature and character of the legisla tion, not its ultimate economic results—that matters"; see also Gold Seal Ltd. v. Dom. Express Co. v. A.G. Alta. (1921) 62 S.C.R. 424 at 460.
9 While it is recognized that it is a rule of interpretation that a statute ought if possible, to be interpreted so as to respect vested rights, that rule is distinct from the rule that no statute should be construed to have a retrospective effect. While a retrospective statute can destroy vested rights, it does not follow that a statute is retrospective merely because it does destroy vested rights. Vested rights may be destroyed even though Parliament has not expressly declared its intention to do so but has left such intention to be manifested by inference. (cf. West v. Gwynne [1911] 2 Ch. 1 at 15; and Spooner Oils Ltd. v. Turner Valley Gas Conservation Bd. [1933] S.C.R. 629 at 638.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.