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A-175-76
Dame Madeleine Laurent-Algrain (Plaintiff) (Appellant)
v.
The Queen (Defendant) (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Pratte and Le Dain JJ. and Hyde D.J.—Montreal, October 25, 1976.
Enemy property Claim for indemnity Whether custodian negligent in selling property or acting ultra vires—Period of limitation—Revised Regulations Respecting Trading with the Enemy, 1939—Quebec Civil Code, arts. 2261 and 2267.
Property in Quebec belonging to the appellant, a resident of Belgium, was seized by the custodian named in the Revised Regulations Respecting Trading with the Enemy, 1939, in 1942, Belgium being a "forbidden territory" within the mean ing of those Regulations. It was sold by the custodian in 1944 for $6,000. Appellant alleges that it was worth $47,000 and claims an indemnity of $41,000, being the difference between the value of the property and the price at which it was sold. Appellant claims that the limitation of actions for tort is not applicable because the custodian had in fact carried out an expropriation. The Trial Judge dismissed the action on the grounds that the custodian was not acting as an employee or agent of the Crown.
Held, the appeal is dismissed. If there was expropriation it took place at the time when the property was seized and the action was not brought until over 30 years later. However, the powers of a custodian over enemy property and the property of residents of a "forbidden territory" are the same although the reasons for awarding them are different. Appellant's action can therefore only be based on delict and was out of time long before the date when it was brought.
APPEAL.
COUNSEL:
P. Ferland, Q.C., for plaintiff, appellant.
J. C. Ruelland, Q.C., for defendant, respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Pothier Ferland, Q.C., Montreal, for plaintiff, appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant, respondent.
The following is the English version of the reasons for judgment of the Court delivered orally by
PRATTE J.: Appellant is appealing the decision of the Trial Division dismissing the action for damages which she brought against respondent.
During the last war, appellant lived in Belgium, a "forbidden territory" within the meaning of the Revised Regulations Respecting Trading with the Enemy, 1939. As a result, the custodian named in these regulations in 1942 seized a property belong ing to appellant and situated in Quebec. This property, which according to appellant was worth $47,000, was sold by the custodian for $6,000 on May 26, 1944. Appellant in her action claims an indemnity of $41,000, that is, the difference be tween the value of her property and the price for which the custodian sold it. The Trial Judge dis missed this action because he felt that the custodi an was neither an employee nor an agent of the Crown, so that the latter could not be held respon sible for the irregularities which he might have committed.
At the start of the hearing we asked counsel for the appellant to tell us why the judgment a quo should not be upheld on the ground that appel lant's action, brought on May 21, 1974, had then long since been proscribed (see articles 2261 and 2267 of the Quebec Civil Code).
Counsel for the appellant admitted that the action would be proscribed if it merely had a delictual basis, that is, the negligence alleged to have been committed by the custodian in selling a property without taking the necessary precautions to obtain a good price for it. He argued, however, that his client's claim was subject to the thirty- year limitation which did not begin to run until the day on which the property was sold, May 26, 1944. He maintained that the custodian, by selling the property, had exercised a power which he did not possess, and that he thereby in fact carried out an expropriation. Appellant's claim, he said, must therefore be put on the same footing as that of someone whose property has been expropriated and to whom the Crown refuses to pay the value of her property.
This argument does not seem reasonable to the Court. If it were true that, to use the language of counsel for the appellant, the latter's property was "expropriated", this expropriation did not take place at the time of the sale, on May 26, 1944, but several years earlier when the property was "allocated" to the custodian. Contrary to what was argued by counsel for the appellant, we do not believe that the regulations gave the custodian different powers over the property of persons resid ing in forbidden territories than over that belong ing to the enemy. All that may be said in this regard is that powers were given to the custodian over these two categories of property for different reasons, not that the powers themselves are differ ent. In our opinion, section 21 of the regulations allocates these two categories of property indis criminately to the custodian, who enjoys the same powers of disposal with respect to each of them.
We are therefore of the opinion that the only basis that appellant's action can have is delictual. That being the case, the action had already long since been proscribed at the time it was brought. For that reason, the appeal will be dismissed with costs.
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