T-3747-71
Gypsum Carrier Inc. (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
and
Canadian National Railway Company, The Queen
on the information of the Attorney-General of
Canada, British Columbia Hydro & Power Au
thority and Great Northern Railway Company
(Plaintiffs)
v.
The Ship Harry Lundeberg (Defendant)
Trial Division, Collier J.—Vancouver, December
21 and 22, 1976; Toronto, May 9, 1977.
Crown — Torts — Negligence — Economic loss — Ship
found negligent in collision with Crown-owned bridge — Rail
ways unable to use bridge as per contract with Crown —
Whether railway agreements amount to easement over the
bridge — Whether the railways can recover economic loss
from owners of negligent ship.
The Harry Lundeberg collided with a federally owned bridge
and was found to be solely at fault. The three railway compa
nies either owned lands and trackage, or track rights to the
approaches of the bridge. Because of the collision, the bridge
was closed and alternative crossings had to be arranged. The
railways are bringing an action against the owners of the Harry
Lundeberg in negligence and claim damages for the cost of
re-routing their trains. The Court considers these claims in a
resumption of the consolidated action.
Held, the action is dismissed. Although documents appear to
contain the so-called essentials of an easement, when read as a
whole, there was no intention to create easements. The purpose
was to create certain contractual rights whereby the railways,
in return for stipulated fees, were permitted to run their trains
over the bridge and approaches. There was no intention to
create any rights annexed to land, or any interests in land. At
best the railway companies had some kind of licence in respect
of land. With respect to the negligence issue, the foreseeable
and direct consequence tests ought to be applied. The railway
companies were not persons so closely and directly affected that
those having charge of the vessel ought reasonably to have had
the railways in contemplation when the vessel was proceeding
toward the bridges. The owners of the bridge, however, were
within the scope of a duty of care on the part of those
responsible for the vessel. The railways are denied recovery and
the vessel is absolved from liability to compensate. The rail-
ways' economic loss was not a direct and reasonably foreseeable
result of the striking of the bridge by the vessel. Even if
persuaded that the railways had an easement, the result would
have been the same.
ACTION.
COUNSEL:
J. R. Cunningham and G. R. Heinmiller for
plaintiff Gypsum Carrier Inc. and defendant
The Ship Harry Lundeberg.
E. Chiasson for plaintiff Canadian National
Railway Co.
J. M. McEwen for plaintiff B.C. Hydro &
Power Authority.
R. Wismer for defendant (plaintiff) the
Queen.
D. Martin for plaintiff Great Northern Rail
way Co.
SOLICITORS:
Macrae, Montgomery, Spring & Cunning-
ham, Vancouver, for plaintiff Gypsum Carri
er Inc. and defendant The Ship Harry
Lundeberg.
Ladner, Downs, Vancouver, for plaintiff
Canadian National Railway Co.
Legal Department, B.C. Hydro & Power Au
thority, Vancouver, for plaintiff B.C. Hydro
& Power Authority.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
defendant (plaintiff) the Queen.
Douglas, Symes & Brissenden, Vancouver,
for plaintiff Great Northern Railway Co.
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
COLLIER J.: At this point in this litigation there
is for determination an issue as to whether the
damages claimed by certain of the plaintiffs are
recoverable. The question came about in this way.
The Federal Crown is the owner of a bridge
spanning, in a north-south direction, the Fraser
River near the City of New Westminster, B.C. At
the material time the only users of the bridge were
the plaintiffs Canadian National Railway Com
pany, British Columbia Hydro & Power Author
ity, and Great Northern Railway Company (now
Burlington Northern Inc.). I will refer to those
plaintiffs as "the railway companies", "the rail
ways" or sometimes "the plaintiffs". Each of the
three railways had agreements with the Federal
Crown permitting them, for prescribed tolls per
car, to use the bridge facilities. It will be neces
sary, later, to deal in more detail with the nature
and effect of those agreements.
The bridge was originally constructed in the
early part of this century by the Province of Brit-
ish Columbia. It was erected "... for the purpose
of railway, vehicular and passenger traffic ...." In
the late 1930's the Pattullo Bridge, slightly
upstream, was completed. The bridge in question
was then transferred to the Federal Crown. It has
since become known as the New Westminster
Railway Bridge (hereafter the "railway bridge", or
the "bridge"). Vehicular and pedestrian traffic use
the Pattullo Bridge'.
The railway bridge has a swing span. When that
span is open, marine traffic, which could not other
wise pass under, can proceed up or down stream.
The vessel Harry Lundeberg is an ocean going
freighter. She is owned by the plaintiff Gypsum
Carrier Inc. She was used to carry gypsum from
Mexico to New Westminster. Her master, at the
relevant times, was Captain Louis Sarin. The
vessel in 1966 and 1967 made nine to eleven
voyages to New Westminster. Those voyages
required passage under the bridge through the
draw when the span was open. Captain Sarin knew
the railway bridge carried rail traffic only. He had
seen trains on the bridge.
On July 2, 1968 the Harry Lundeberg, with a
pilot on board, came into collision with the bridge.
The bridge was heavily damaged. All bridge rail
way traffic was suspended for 8 days.
The owners of the vessel brought action against
the Federal Crown. The railway companies and
' See reasons for judgment of Sheppard D.J., p. 2.
the Federal Crown each brought action against the
vessel. The various actions were consolidated.
They came on for trial, before Sheppard D.J., in
the fall of 1970. The parties agreed (reasons, pages
1-2):
... that the issue be tried as to whether the Bridge or the vessel
was at fault, and any reference to the damages would follow
upon that finding.
The hearing took 8 days. The judge found the
vessel solely at fault. He said (reasons, page 15):
In conclusion, the fault of the "Harry Lundeberg" caused the
accident and that fault consisted of negligence. There will be a
reference to the Registrar to determine the amounts of the
damages, and there will be a judgment for the plaintiffs:
Her Majesty the Queen
The Canadian National Railway Company
The British Columbia Hydro & Power Authority
and
The Great Northern Railway (now Burlington Northern Inc.)
for such amounts with interest at 5 per cent per annum from
2nd July, 1968, and costs.
The trial of this consolidated action was then
resumed in December 1976. The purpose was to
determine an issue as set out in the opening sen
tence of these reasons. An initial point was raised
by the parties. It was whether the trial, on the
damages issue, must continue before the same
judge who heard and determined the fault issue, or
whether another member of the Court (myself),
could sit. I ruled that it was not necessary the
same judge should hear and determine the present
matter. The parties had no objection to me, as the
particular judge assigned, continuing the trial.
They, in fact, gave their consent.
I turn now to the specific contentions.
The Federal Crown is claiming $239,403.07 for
the costs of repairs and loss of profits. No question
is raised by the vessel as to the Crown's right to
recover the damages alleged. The dollar amount is
not agreed.
The monetary claims by the three railway com
panies are for their expenses incurred in re-routing
their trains during the bridge closure. No claim is
advanced for any loss of profits. The amounts are:
Canadian National Railway
Company i; $125,483.10
B.C. Hydro & Power Authority 12,169.67
Great Northern Railway I 22,969.19
1 5,743.7171 2
In the amended defence, the vessel 3 asserts in
respect of the railway companies:
8A. In the further alternative and in further answer to the
allegations in the Statements of Claim of the Plaintiffs other
than Her Majesty The Queen in the Right of Canada, the
Defendant says that if these Plaintiffs have suffered loss or
damage, which is not admitted but is specifically denied, then
such loss or damage as is alleged is not recoverable in law
against the Defendant by the said Plaintiffs.
In the statement of admitted facts (Ex. 39) the
problem is put as follows:
2. The issue to be determined on the continuance of the trial is
whether the claims of the three Plaintiff railway companies in
the above actions numbered T-4226-71, T-3858-71 and
T-3860-71 for damages are too remote, assuming, as was held
by the Learned Trial Judge, the damage to the New Westmin-
ster Railway Bridge was caused by the negligence of those in
charge of the Defendant ship "HARRY LUNDEBERG".
The defendant says that no damage or injury
was caused to any property owned by the railway
companies, or to any property in which they had a
proprietary interest; their economic loss, (the addi
tional costs incurred) is therefore not recoverable.
The railway companies contend they had a right
of way over the bridge and its approaches; the
bridge was realty; their right of way was an ease-
ment; they had a proprietary, or property, interest
or right which was injured or interfered with by
the negligence of the defendant; their economic
loss flowed from that physical damage to their
proprietary right; the loss is traditionally recover
able; it is not too remote.
The first question then is whether the railways
had an easement or some other proprietary right.
The defendant says the right of the railway was, at
most, a mere licence.
It is necessary to refer to some agreed facts.
2 The exhibit setting out Burlington's claim is unclear as to
whether the second amount is additional to the first. For the
present issue, it is immaterial.
3 I shall, at times, refer to the vessel as the "defendant".
The Canadian National Railway Company
(CN) main line, from east to west, is divided by
the river. The bridge is the connecting link. The
western terminus of the CN is in Vancouver, on
land and tracks owned by it. To the south of the
river (the Surrey side) the CN owns land and
trackage contiguous to the bridge approaches. It
owns, as well, a strip of land (on which there is
trackage) about 100' wide. This strip is below the
bridge approaches. The approaches are owned by
the Federal Crown. Some of the pilings supporting
these approaches are bedded in this strip of land.
The land to the north and south of the strip is
owned by the Federal Crown. The CN does not
own any land or trackage immediately to the north
side of the river (the New Westminster side).
There is trackage, contiguous to the bridge ap
proaches, on land owned by someone else. The CN
has continuous running rights on that trackage. By
that means it connects, at various points, with its
own trackage and lands to service the city of New
Westminster, the main terminus at Vancouver,
and North Vancouver.
British Columbia Hydro & Power Authority
owns and operates railway trackage on both the
north and south sides of the Fraser River.
There was no agreed statement of facts in
respect of the land and trackage owned by Bur-
lington Northern Inc., or as to location of its
property in relation to the bridge and its ap
proaches. I assume that was oversight. At the
hearing before me it appeared to be common
ground that Burlington Northern Inc. owned land
and trackage, north and south of the river, contig
uous to the bridge and its approaches.
All three railway companies had written agree
ments (Ex. 42), going back some years, with the
Federal Crown. For the purpose of this issue, it is
my view the agreements are substantially the same
in meaning and effect. It is on those documents the
railway companies base their assertion of ease-
ments.
The railways were given the right to construct
and maintain connections between their own
tracks and the tracks on the bridge and its ap
proaches. They were further given the right,
during the term of the agreements, to run their
trains over the bridge and the approaches. The
Federal Crown stipulated that it should have and
maintain
... full control over the maintenance and betterment of the
property covered by this agreement ....
and undertook to repair the bridge and approaches
at its own expense. The Crown further agreed to
substitute, at its expense, heavier rails if they
became necessary. The Crown was not, however,
required to rebuild or replace the "... bridge
structure proper". If there were complete or par
tial destruction of the steel structure, or any sub
stantial part of the bridge, the railways had the
option to terminate the agreement.
The railway companies agreed to pay
... for and in full consideration of all the uses, rights and
privileges by this agreement granted ....
fifty-three cents per car passing over the bridge. If
there were default in the payment provisions, then
the Federal Crown had the option to terminate the
agreement.
Until 1960, the life of the agreements had been
for a fixed number of years. They initially pro
vided the agreements could be terminated (other
than as set out above) by mutual consent, or by
either party giving a three year notice of
termination. 4 Effective December 1, 1959 the
agreements were renewed for terms of one year (to
November 30, 1960) and
... thenceforth from year to year thereafter until terminated by
mutual consent....
An easement has been defined as 5
... a right annexed to land to utilise other land of different
ownership in a particular manner (not involving the taking of
any part of the natural produce of that land or of any part of its
soil) or to prevent the owner of the other land from utilising his
land in a particular manner.
The railway companies contend that all the essen
tial characteristics of an easement are here
4 The B.C. Hydro initial agreement did not have that
provision.
5 Halsbury's Laws of England, (4th ed.) vol. 14, para. 1, p. 4.
present. 6 There is, it is said, a dominant tenement
(the railway lands and trackage) and a servient
tenement (the bridge and its approaches); the
easement accommodates (is connected with the
beneficial enjoyment of) the railway lands and
trackage; the owners of the two tenements are
different persons; the easement alleged is capable
of forming the subject matter of a grant (by deed).
In my opinion, the agreements between the
Crown and the railway companies did not create
easements in favour of the railway companies. The
documents, superficially, appear to contain the
so-called essentials of an easement. But I think one
must ascertain the intention of the parties. To my
mind, when the agreements are read as a whole,
there was no intention to create easements. The
purpose was to create certain contractual rights
whereby the railways, in return for stipulated fees,
were permitted to run their trains over the bridge
and approaches. There was no intention to create
any rights annexed to land, or any interest in
land.'
Leaving aside intention, and merely construing
the agreements, I conclude, as well, there were no
easements created. I have kept in mind the admo
nition that the "list of easements is not closed".
The railway companies say, alternatively, that if
there was not, in fact and law, an easement, they
nevertheless had some "lesser proprietary inter
est"; the vessel is liable for interfering with it.
Certain authorities 8 were relied upon. They are, in
my opinion, readily distinguishable. They were
concerned with compensation for injurious affec
tion, or with public nuisance. I do not understand
what, in this case, is meant by "some lesser pro
prietary interest". At best, the railway companies
6 Halsbury's Laws of England, (4th ed.), paras. 2-18, pp.
4-9. See also paras. 19-167, pp. 9-82, as to easements and rights
of way generally; Megarry and Wade, The Law of Real
Property, (3rd ed.) 1966, pp. 802-807; In re Ellenborough Park
[ 1956] I Ch. 131.
' I contrast the situation discussed in In re Ellenborough
Park [1956] I Ch. 131, per Evershed M.R. at pp. 167-168.
B The Queen v. The Great Northern Railway Co. (1849) 117
E.R. 10; Ricket v. The Metropolitan Railway Co. (1865) 122
E.R. 790 and Campbell v. Metropolitan Borough of Padding-
ton [19111 I K.B. 869.
may have had some kind of licence in respect of
land (the bridge and approaches). The characteri
zation of a right as giving a proprietary interest
does not necessarily, to my mind, permit recovery
against an alleged tortfeasor, or someone who
carelessly disrupts that right.
I now turn to the second area of dispute. This
engenders a foray into the vexed and developing
field of liability for negligent acts and pure eco
nomic loss.
For the railway companies it is said their addi
tional outlays, even though there was no physical
damage to any property owned by them, are recov
erable from the vessel. For the vessel it is said
there is no recovery for economic loss (without
physical damage) except in special relationship
situations such as Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v.
Heller & Partners Ltd. 9 and Rivtow Marine Ltd.
v. Washington Iron Works 10 ; there was no such
special relationship here; the damages claimed are
too remote.
A large volume of cases and other authoritative
materials were cited. I admit to having considered,
as well, other cases and materials. For the conve
nience of the parties, I set them all out in an
appendix to these reasons.
As I see it, the problem is probably two-fold
and, at that, intermingled. The basic question may
well be, not so much remoteness of damage, but
whether there was, in the circumstances, any duty
to these particular railway companies. Lord Den-
ning M.R., in Spartan Steel & Alloys Ltd. v.
Martin & Co. (Contractors) Ltd., described the
problem, and his approach, as follows":
Mr. Bathurst submitted in the alternative that the views
expressed by Winn L.J. and me in S.C.M. (United Kingdom)
Ltd. v. W.J. Whittall & Son Ltd. [1971] 1 Q.B. 337 were
wrong. He said that if there was any limitation on the recovery
of economic loss, it was to be found by restricting the sphere of
9 [1964] A.C.465.
10 [ 1974] S.C.R. 1189.
" [1973] 1 Q.B. 27 at pp. 36-37.
duty, and not by limiting the type of damages recoverable. In
this present case, he said, the defendants admittedly were under
a duty to the plaintiffs and had broken it. The damages by way
of economic loss were foreseeable, and, therefore, they should
be recoverable. He cited several statements from the books in
support of his submissions, including some by myself.
At bottom I think the question of recovering economic loss is
one of policy. Whenever the courts draw a line to mark out the
bounds of duty, they do it as matter of policy so as to limit the
responsibility of the defendant. Whenever the courts set bounds
to the damages recoverable—saying that they are, or are not,
too remote—they do it as matter of policy so as to limit the
liability of.the defendant.
In many of the cases where economic loss has been held not
to be recoverable, it has been put on the ground that the
defendant was under no duty to the plaintiff. Thus where a
person is injured in a road accident by the negligence of
another, the negligent driver owes a duty to the injured man
himself, but he owes no duty to the servant of the injured
man—see Best v. Samuel Fox & Co. Ltd. [1952] A.C. 716,
731: nor to the master of the injured man—Inland Revenue
Commissioners v. Hambrook [1956] 2 Q.B. 641, 660: nor to
anyone else who suffers loss because he had a contract with the
injured man—see Simpson & Co. v. Thomson (1877) 3
App.Cas. 279, 289: nor indeed to anyone who only suffers
economic loss on account of the accident: see Kirkham v.
Boughey [1958] 2 Q.B. 338, 341. Likewise when property is
damaged by the negligence of another, the negligent tortfeasor
owes a duty to the owner or possessor of the chattel, but not to
one who suffers loss only because he had a contract entitling
him to use the chattel or giving him a right to receive it at some
later date: see Elliott Steam Tug Co. Ltd. v. Shipping Con
troller [1922] 1 K.B. 127, 139 and Margarine Union G.m.b.H.
v. Cambay Prince Steamship Co. Ltd. [1969] 1 Q.B. 219,
251-252.
In other cases, however, the defendant seems clearly to have
been under a duty to the plaintiff, but the economic loss has not
been recovered because it is too remote. Take the illustration
given by Blackburn J. in Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co.
(1875) L.R. 10 Q.B. 453, 457, when water escapes from a
reservoir and floods a coal mine where many men are working.
Those who had their tools or clothes destroyed could recover:
but those who only lost their wages could not. Similarly, when
the defendants' ship negligently sank a ship which was being
towed by a tug, the owner of the tug lost his remuneration, but
he could not recover it from the negligent ship: though the same
duty (of navigation with reasonable care) was owed to both tug
and tow: see Société Anonyme de Remorquage à Hélice v.
Bennetts [1911] 1 K.B. 243, 248. In such cases if the plaintiff
or his property had been physically injured, he would have
recovered: but, as he only suffered economic loss, he is held not
entitled to recover. This is, I should think, because the loss is
regarded by the law as too remote: see King v. Phillips [1953]
1 Q.B. 429, 439-440.
On the other hand, in the cases where economic loss by itself
has been held to be recoverable, it is plain that there was a duty
to the plaintiff and the loss was not too remote. Such as when
one ship negligently runs down another ship, and damages it,
with the result that the cargo has to be discharged and reload
ed. The negligent ship was already under a duty to the cargo
owners: and they can recover the cost of discharging and
reloading it, as it is not too remote: see Morrison Steamship
Co. Ltd. v. Greystoke Castle (Cargo Owners) [1947] A.C. 265.
Likewise, when a banker negligently gives a reference to one
who acts on it, the duty is plain and the damage is not too
remote: see Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd.
[1964] A.C. 465.
The more I think about these cases, the more difficult I find
it to put each into its proper pigeon-hole. Sometimes I say:
"There was no duty." In others I say: "The damage was too
remote." So much so that I think the time has come to discard
those tests which have proved so elusive. It seems to me better
to consider the particular relationship in hand, and see whether
or not, as a matter of policy, economic loss should be recover
able, or not. Thus in Weller & Co. v. Foot and Mouth Disease
Research Institute [1966] 1 Q.B. 569 it was plain that the loss
suffered by the auctioneers was not recoverable, no matter
whether it is put on the ground that there was no duty or that
the damage was too remote. Again in Electrochrome Ltd. v.
Welsh Plastics Ltd. [1968] 2 All E.R. 205, it is plain that the
economic loss suffered by the plaintiffs' factory (due to the
damage to the fire hydrant) was not recoverable, whether
because there was no duty or that it was too remote.
The statement of Lawton L.J. in the same case
sets out, in my view, the current position in
England 12 :
This appeal raises neatly a question which has been asked
from time to time since Blackburn J. delivered his well known
judgment in Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875) L.R. 10
Q.B. 453 and more frequently since the decision in Hedley
Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd. [1964] A.C. 465,
namely, whether a plaintiff can recover from a defendant,
proved or admitted to have been negligent, foreseeable financial
damage which is not consequential upon foreseeable physical
injury or damage to property. Any doubts there may have been
about the recovery of such consequential financial damage were
settled by this court in S.C.M. (United Kingdom) Ltd. v. W.J.
Whittall & Son Ltd. [1971] 1 Q.B. 337. In my judgment the
answer to this question is that such financial damage cannot be
recovered save when it is the immediate consequence of a
breach of duty to safeguard the plaintiff from that kind of loss.
That is not, as I see it, since the Rivtow case, the
position in Canada. It is possible, by detailed
analysis, to restrict the Rivtow decision to its
12 [1973] 1 Q.B. 27 at pp. 46-47. See: Salmond on Torts
(16th ed.) 1973, pp. 205-207; Winfield & Jolowicz on Tort
(10th ed.) 1975, pp. 51-53; Street, The Law of Torts (6th ed.)
1976, pp. 112-114 and Millner, Negligence in Modern Law,
(1967), pp. 60-63.
particular fact situation and to the particular rela
tionship which existed between the plaintiff and
the two defendants. But members of the Supreme
Court of Canada, in subsequent decisions, have
themselves asserted that Rivtow is authority for
the wider proposition: there need not be physical
injury to person or property in order successfully
to recover for pure economic loss. In Haig v.
Bamford 13 Dickson J. said:
Recovery for economic loss caused by negligence has been
allowed in Rivtow ... .
Pigeon J. in Agnew-Surpass Shoe Stores Limited
v. Cummer-Yonge Investments Ltd. said: 14
It is now settled by the judgment of this Court in Rivtow .. .
that recovery for economic loss caused by negligence is allow
able without any recovery for property damage.
I am satisfied that, in this case, the absence of
physical damage to any property of the railway
companies does not, by itself, preclude recovery for
the additional expense the railway companies
incurred (the economic loss).
The very difficult question is whether the vessel
is legally liable to the railways for that loss.
Lord Denning M.R. in the Spartan Steel case
expressed his personal view that the question of
recovery is one of policy; the court draws the
boundaries
... so as to limit the liability of the defendant .... If ... [the
negligent act] causes economic loss ... [to a number of per
sons] should it as a matter of policy be recoverable? And
against whom? 15
This approach has found favour with some com
mentators; others hold the view that policy con
siderations, in cases of this kind, are really what
brings a judge, whether he says so or not, to a
13 [1977] 1 S.C.R. 466 at p. 483, Laskin C.J.C., Ritchie,
Spence, Pigeon and Beetz JJ. concurred.
14 [1976] 2 S.C.R. 221 at p. 252. Ritchie, Dickson, and Beetz
JJ. concurred.
15 [1973] 1 Q.B. 27 at 36, 37. Lord Denning went on to set
out, in that particular case, five policy considerations.
particular result. 16 Ritchie J. in the Rivtow case,
speaking for himself and six others had this to say
on the point of "policy" decisions 17 :
I am conscious of the fact that I have not referred to all
relevant authorities relating to recovery for economic loss under
such circumstances, but I am satisfied that in the present case
there was a proximity of relationship giving rise to a duty to
warn and that the damages awarded by the learned trial judge
were recoverable as compensation for the direct and demonstra
bly foreseeable result of the breach of that duty. This being the
case, I do not find it necessary to follow the sometimes winding
paths leading to the formulation of a "policy decision".
Edmund Davies L.J., in the Spartan Steel case,
dissented. To my mind, his conclusions in respect
of recovery for economic loss are in line with the
Canadian legal position as laid down in the Rivtow
decision. I adopt his views as to the application of
policy considerations ' 8 :
I ... find myself unable to accept as factors determinant of
legal principle those considerations of policy canvassed in the
concluding passages of the judgment just delivered by Lord
Denning, M.R.
As I see it, policy decisions, in suits between
litigants, should be eschewed. It makes for uncer
tainty. Litigants, would-be litigants, and persons
endeavouring to organize their commercial affairs
in respect of potential risks should be given some
guidelines (even if they are somewhat vague and
difficult to define) on the likelihood or not of
recovery or liability.
My difficulty is: what are the tests or principles
to be applied in this case? It seems to me there are
16 Bruce M. Haines (1961) 19 University of Toronto Faculty
of Law Review 191 at 204-205, commenting on Seaway Hotels
Ltd. v. Gragg (1960) 21 D.L.R. (2d) 264; Winfield & Jolowicz,
pp. 51-53; Street, p. 112; Millner, pp. 62-63; Professor P. S.
Atiyah Negligence and Economic Loss (1967) 83 L.Q.R. 248;
A. H. Brown The Recovery of Economic Loss In Tort (1972-
75) 2 Auckland Univ. Law Rev. 50, particularly at pp. 77-84;
Christopher Harvey Economic Losses and Negligence (1972)
50 Can. B. Rev. 580; Mary V. Newbury (1972) 7 U.B.C. Law
Rev. 303 at 310-311, commenting on the B.C. Court of Appeal
decision in the Rivtow case and P. P. Craig, Negligent Mis
statements, Negligent Acts and Economic Loss (1976) 92
L.Q.R. 213 at 235-241.
17 [1974] S.C.R. 1189 at p. 1215.
18 [1973] 1 Q.B. 27 at p. 40.
at least three approaches, not necessarily distinct
from each other.
The first is what I might term the assumption of
responsibility test. It is generally accepted it had
its most recent origin in the speeches of Lords
Reid, Devlin and Pearce in the Hedley Byrne
case 19 . The Supreme Court of Canada has never,
as I read the decisions, expressly adopted this test.
Mention has been made of it. In Welbridge Hold
ings Ltd. v. The Metropolitan Corporation of
Greater Winnipeg Laskin J. [as he then was], in
discussing the liability of the City for passing an
invalid by-law which allegedly resulted in some
economic loss to the plaintiff, said 20 :
Under the considerations on which Hedley Byrne's enuncia
tion of principle rests, it cannot be said in the present case
either that a special relationship arose between the plaintiff and
the defendant or that the defendant assumed any responsibility
to the plaintiff with respect to procedural regularity.
In J. Nunes Diamonds Ltd. v. Dominion Electric
Protection Company, Pigeon J. said 21 :
D.E.P. did not act in any fiduciary or advisory capacity
towards Nunes. Its situation was that of a party contracting to
supply specified services. The insurance brokers were those who
were giving advice to Nunes. By giving them information,
D.E.P. did not cease to be a contractor and become an advisor
to the appellant on the matter of burglary protection. If it did
make an honest, but inaccurate, statement as to the perform
ance of its system it did not thereby assume responsibility for
all damage which might thereafter be sustained by the appel
lant if its system, on his premises, was circumvented.
In Haig v. Bamford, Dickson J. made this
comment":
This reference to "assumption of responsibility" is crucial in
cases involving economic loss, according to C. Harvey, "Eco-
nomic Losses & Negligence" (1972), 50 Can. Bar Rev. 580.
Harvey devises a test for imposing a duty of care in cases of
economic loss which he phrases as follows (p. 600):
19 [1964] A.C. 465 at pp. 486-487, 529-530, and 540.
20 [1971] S.C.R. 957 at p. 967. See also a passage at p. 971.
21 [1972] S.C.R. 769 at 777.
22 [1977] 1 S.C.R. 466 at pp. 479-480. Mr. Christopher
Harvey in a later comment on the Rivtow case seems to favour,
as a liability-control device, foreseeability of injury and direct
ness of the economic loss, rather than assumption of responsi
bility. See (1974) 37 Modern Law Rev. 320 at p. 324.
a person should be bound by a legal duty of care to avoid
causing economic loss to another in circumstances where a
reasonable man in the position of the defendant would foresee
that kind of loss and would assume responsibility for it.
This "assumption of responsibility" test is an interesting one,
although it is no more objective than a foreseeability test. It
would allow the Court to narrow the scope of liability from that
resulting from a foreseeability test, but it would still require a
policy determination as to what should be the scope of liability.
In Minister of Housing v. Sharp 23 all three
members of the Court of Appeal were critical of
that test or doctrine. Lord Denning M.R., at pages
268-269, commented:
I have no doubt that the clerk is liable. He was under a duty
at common law to use due care. That was a duty which he owed
to any person—incumbrancer or purchaser—whom he knew, or
ought to have known, might be injured if he made a mistake.
The case comes four square within the principles which are
stated in Candler v. Crane, Christmas & Co. [1951] 2 K.B.
164, 179-185, and which were approved by the House of Lords
in Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd. [1964]
A.C. 465.
Mr. Hunter submitted to us, however, that the correct princi
ple did not go to that length. He said that a duty to use due
care (where there was no contract) only arose when there was a
voluntary assumption of responsibility. I do not agree. He relied
particularly on the words of Lord Reid in Hedley Byrne's case
[1964] A.C. 465, 487, and of Lord Devlin at p. 529. I think
they used those words because of the special circumstances of
that case (where the bank disclaimed responsibility). But they
did not in any way mean to limit the general principle.
In my opinion the duty to use due care in a statement arises,
not from any voluntary assumption of responsibility, but from
the fact that the person making it knows, or ought to know,
that others, being his neighbours in this regard, would act on
the faith of the statement being accurate. That is enough to
bring the duty into being. It is owed, of course, to the person to
whom the certificate is issued and whom he knows is going to
act on it, see the judgment of Cardozo J. in Glanzer v. Shepard
(1922) 233 N.Y. 236. But it also is owed to any person whom
he knows, or ought to know, will be injuriously affected by a
mistake, such as the incumbrancer here.
At page 279, Salmon L.J. said:
It has been argued, in the present case, that since the council
did not voluntarily make the search or prepare the certificate
for their clerk's signature they did not voluntarily assume
responsibility for the accuracy of the certificate and according
ly owed no duty of care to the Minister. I do not accept that, in
all cases, the obligation to take reasonable care necessarily
depends upon a voluntary assumption of responsibility.
23 [1970] 2 Q.B. 223.
Cross L.J., at pages 290-291, made these remarks:
The question is whether there was sufficient "proximity"
between the Ministry and the searcher—whether he was suf
ficiently their "neighbour"—to render him liable to be sued
under the modern developments of the law of tort which were
initiated by Donoghue v. Stevenson [1932] A.C. 562 and
extended to negligent statements in Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v.
Heller & Partners Ltd. [1964] A.C. 465. Some points can
readily be got out of the way. The problem posed by the case of
the hydrographer who draws an inaccurate chart and is sued by
an unknown purchaser of it does not arise here because the
searcher will have been given a request to register, or a request
for a search, as the case may be, on behalf of an identified
person with whom he will have been brought, in a sense, into
diçect contact.
Further, although the searcher's work does not involve any
"special skill" he may fairly be assumed to have realised that
not to register a document submitted for registration, or to omit
to disclose a registered charge in a certificate of search, might
cause serious damage to the party requesting the registration or
the search. Again I do not think that the fact that the searcher
did not undertake the function of making the statement in
question "voluntarily"—except in the sense that he could have
refused to accept employment in so potentially hazardous an
occupation—is relevant to the problem in hand.
It is true that the phrase "voluntary assumption of risk"
occurs frequently in the speeches in the Hedley Byrne case, but
I agree with the judge that that case did not purport to lay
down any metes and bounds within which legal liability in tort
for false statements, on which the parties to whom they are
made rely, has to be confined: see in particular per Lord
Devlin, at pp. 530-531. I see no sufficient reason why in an
appropriate case the liability should not extend to cases in
which the defendant is obliged to make the statement which
proves to be false.
The assumption of responsibility test may be apt
in cases of negligent misstatements or negligent
advice. But as I see it, it is fraught with difficulties
when one tries to apply it to careless acts or
omissions. I discard it as a solution in this case.
The second approach is that of foreseeability
alone, or foreseeability plus a special relationship.
That method has found favour with some courts.
The starting point is, of course, the classic state
ments of Lord Atkin in Donoghue v. Stevenson 24:
24 [1932] A.C. 562 at pp. 580-581.
At present I content myself with pointing out that in English
law there must be, and is, some general conception of relations
giving rise to a duty of care, of which the particular cases found
in the books are but instances. The liability for negligence,
whether you style it such or treat it as in other systems as a
species of "culpa," is no doubt based upon a general public
sentiment of moral wrongdoing for which the offender must
pay. But acts or omissions which any moral code would censure
cannot in a practical world be treated so as to give a right to
every person injured by them to demand relief. In this way
rules of law arise which limit.the range of complainants and the
extent of their remedy. The rule that you are to love your
neighbour becomes in law, you must not injure your neighbour;
and the lawyer's question, Who is my neighbour? receives a
restricted reply. You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or
omissions which you can reasonably foresee would be likely to
injure your neighbour. Who, then, in law is my neighbour? The
answer seems to be—persons who are so closely and directly
affected by my act that I ought reasonably to have them in
contemplation as being so affected when I am directing my
mind to the acts or omissions which are called in question. This
appears to me to be the doctrine of Heaven v. Pender, as laid
down by Lord Esher (then Brett M.R.) when it is limited by the
motion of proximity introduced by Lord Esher himself and A.
L. Smith L.J. in Le Lievre v. Gould. Lord Esher says: "That
case established that, under certain circumstances, one man
may owe a duty to another, even though there is no contract
between them. If one man is near to another, or is near to the
property of another, a duty lies upon him not to do that which
may cause a personal injury to that other, or may injure his
property." So A. L. Smith L.J.: "The decision of Heaven v.
Pender was founded upon the principle, that a duty to take due
care did arise when the person or property of one was in such
proximity to the person or property of another that, if due care
was not taken, damage might be done by the one to the other."
I think that this sufficiently states the truth if proximity be not
confined to mere physical proximity, but be used, as I think it
was intended, to extend to such close and direct relations that
the act complained of directly affects a person whom the person
alleged to be bound to take care would know would be directly
affected by his careless act. [My underlining.]
In Weiner v. Zoratti the defendant car driver
negligently struck a fire hydrant. Water from it
forced its way into the plaintiffs basement,
damaging the plaintiffs stock in trade. Matas J.
fastened liability on the defendant 25 :
In summary, counsel for the defendant submitted that the
plaintiffs loss was damnum sine injuria as the water damage to
the goods could not have been reasonably foreseen by the
defendant. But it is not necessary to engage in speculation
about the specific foreseeability of each specific event from the
moment of impact to the damage to the plaintiffs property; nor
is it necessary to embark on an exercise in metaphysical
25 (1970) 72 W.W.R. 299 at p. 304.
subtleties. The plaintiff's loss was a direct, probable and fore
seeable result of the negligent breaking of the hydrant just as
much as if a piece of the broken hydrant had been propelled by
the impact through the window of the plaintiff's shop or had
struck a passing pedestrian causing physical injury.
In School Division of Assiniboine South v.
Greater Winnipeg Gas Company Limited a snow
mobile struck and damaged a gas-riser pipe on a
school building. Gas entered the building and
exploded. The snowmobile had been operated by a
14 year old boy. It was owned by his father. On
the facts of the case both the boy and his father
were held partly at fault. Dickson J.A. gave the
judgment of the Manitoba Court of Appeal. I set
out certain excerpts 26:
We come then to the preliminary question of whether a duty
of care was owed by the Hoffers to the plaintiff. The answer to
this question must be in the affirmative. They had a machine of
substantial size and weight, capable of high speed. They knew,
or should have known, that if the machine were released to
careen riderless around the countryside, damage to the person
or property of others would result. The case falls squarely
within the "neighbour" principle enunciated by Lord Atkin in
Donoghue (M'Alister) v. Stevenson, [1932] A.C. 562 at
580....
The second question is whether the damage done by them
was reasonably foreseeable and therefore recoverable ....
The test of foreseeability of damage becomes a question of
what is possible rather than what is probable.
Since The Wagon Mound (No. 1) the "scholastic theories of
causation and their ugly and barely intelligent jargon", have
taken a back place to foreseeability. It is now settled that
foresight is the test both for duty and for remoteness.
Union Oil Company v. Oppen 27 is an interesting,
and perhaps perplexing decision. I neither rely on
it nor reject it. American authorities, in this field,
must be considered with caution. The suit was a
class action brought by commercial fishermen
against a number of oil companies. It arose out of
the Santa Barbara oil spill of 1969. There was a
claim for "ecological damage". The defendants, by
motion, sought to eliminate from the plaintiffs'
claims for relief "... any element of damages
consisting of profits lost as a result of the reduc-
26 [1971] 4 W.W.R. 746 at pp. 750, 751, 753.
27 501 F. 2d 558 (1974) (U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth
Circuit). This decision has been commented on. See 88 Har-
vard Law Rev. 444 (1974-1975).
tion in the commercial fishing potential ...." The
defendants argued that such claims were not com-
pensable under the law. The Court dealt with the
problem of recovery for pure economic loss as
follows at pages 563-564:
Recovery for Pure Economic Loss in Negligence: The General
Rule.
Defendants support their motion for partial summary judg
ment by pointing to the widely recognized principle that no
cause of action lies against a defendant whose negligence
prevents the plaintiff from obtaining a prospective pecuniary
advantage. See, e.g., Prosser, Law of Torts 952 (4th ed. 1971)
(hereinafter Prosser); Harvey, Economic Losses and Negli
gence, 50 Can. Bar Rev. 580 (1972); Note, 49 Can. Bar Rev.
619 (1971); Note, Negligence and Economic Loss, 117 The
Solicitors' Jour. 255 (1971); Note, Negligent Interference with
Economic Expectancy: The Case for Recovery, 16 Stan. L.
Rev. 664 (1964). See also Restatement (Second) of Torts,
Tent. Draft No. 14, § 766B. As the defendants see it, any
diminution of the sea life in the Santa Barbara Channel caused
by the occurence, which, it must be remembered, is attributable
to the defendants' negligence by reason of the parties' Stipula
tion, consists of no more than the loss of an economic advan
tage which is not a "legally cognizable injury" and thus not
"legally compensable."
Their argument has strength. It rests upon the proposition
that a contrary rule, which would allow compensation for all
losses of economic advantages caused by defendant's negli
gence, would subject the defendant to claims based upon
remote and speculative injuries which he could not foresee in
any practical sense of the term. Accordingly, in some cases it
has been stated as the general rule that the negligent defendant
owes no duty to plaintiffs seeking compensation for such inju
ries. In other of the cases, the courts have invoked the doctrine
of proximate cause to reach the same result; and in yet a third
class of cases the "remoteness" of the economic loss is relied
upon directly to deny recovery. The consequence of these cases
is that a defendant is normally relieved of the burden to defend
against such claims, and the courts of a class of cases the
resolution of which is particularly difficult.
The general rule has been applied in a wide variety of
situations. Thus, the negligent destruction of a bridge connect
ing the mainland with an island, which caused a loss of business
to the plaintiff who was a merchant on the island, has been held
not to be actionable. Rickards v. Sun Oil Company, 41 A.2d
267, 23 N.J.Misc. 89 (1945). A plaintiff engaged in commer
cial printing has been held unable to recover against a negligent
contractor who, while engaged in excavation pursuant to a
contract with a third party, cut the power line upon which the
plaintiffs presses depended. Byrd v. English, 117 Ga. 191, 43
S.E. 419 (1903); contra, J.W. Moore (North Shields) Ltd. v.
Sharp, 108 Sol.J. 453 (1964). But see S.C.M. (U.K.) v. W.J.
Whittall & Sons, Ld., [1970] 3 All E.R. 245; Seaway Hotels
Ltd. v. Gragg, [1959] Ont. 177, 17 D.L.R.2d 292 (High Ct.),
affd [1959] Ont. 581, 21 D.L.R.2d 264 (Ct.App.1960). A
defendant who negligently injures a third person entitled to
life-care medical services by the plaintiff is liable to the third
person but not to the plaintiff. Fifield Manor v. Finston, 54
Cal.2d 632, 7 Cal.Rptr 377, 354 P.2d 1073 (1960) (subroga-
tion also denied because third party's claim not assignable).
The operators of a dry dock are not liable in admiralty to
charterers of a ship, placed by its owners in the dry dock, for
negligent injury to the ship's propeller where the injury
deprived the charterer of the use of the ship. Robins Dry Dock
& Repair Company v. Flint, 275 U.S. 303, 48 S.Ct. 134, 72
L.Ed. 290 (1927). Mr. Justice Holmes, in writing this opinion,
observed that "... a tort to the person or property of one man
does not make the tort-feasor liable to another merely because
the injured person was under a contract with that other,
unknown to the doer of the wrong." 275 U.S. at 309, 48 S.Ct.
at 135.
The Court went on to cite exceptions or qualifi
cations to the general rule of no recovery. Mr.
Harvey's article and the Hedley Byrne case were
among the many materials cited. The fishermen
were held to be in a special class, akin to riparian
owners.
Page 568:
Moreover, the plaintiffs' status as riparians does not make
improper the classification of these cases as exceptions to, or
qualifications of, the general rule which is relied upon by the
defendants in the present action. The injury for which damages
were sought in each case was the loss of anticipated profits—a
pure economic loss as that term is normally understood. To
permit riparianship to transmute this loss into an ordinary
property loss for the purpose of allowing recovery does no
harm. However, harm would be done if the fact that the
plaintiffs in this case are not riparian owners was held to
deprive them of the comfort these authorities provide.
IV.
The Instant Action.
It is thus apparent that we are not forclosed by precedent
from examining on its merits the issue presented by the defend
ants' motion for partial summary judgment. As we see it, the
issue is whether the defendants owed a duty to the plaintiffs,
commercial fishermen, to refrain from negligent conduct in
their drilling operations, which conduct reasonably and foresee-
ably could have been anticipated to cause a diminution of the
aquatic life in the Santa Barbara Channel area and thus cause
injury to the plaintiffs' business.
Page 569:
... the question must be asked whether the defendants could
reasonably have foreseen that negligently conducted drilling
operations might diminish aquatic life and thus injure the
business of commercial fishermen. We believe the answer is
yes.
Page 570:
Finally, it must be understood that our holding in this case.
does not open the door to claims that may be asserted by those,
other than commercial fishermen, whose economic or personal
affairs were discommoded by the oil spill of January 28, 1969.
The general rule urged upon us by defendants has a legitimate
sphere within which to operate. Nothing said in this opinion is
intended to suggest, for example, that every decline in the
general commercial activity of every business in the Santa
Barbara area following the occurrences of 1969 constitutes a
legally cognizable injury for which the defendants may be
responsible. The plaintiffs in the present action lawfully and
directly make use of a resource of the sea, viz. its fish, in the
ordinary course of their business. This type of use is entitled to
protection from negligent conduct by the defendants in their
drilling operations.
In the three cases I have referred to above,
foreseeability imposed liability. I now turn to two
Canadian decisions where the foreseeability test
excluded liability.
The first is Star Village Tavern v. Nield 28 . The
facts are set out in the reasons [at page 81]:
Plaintiff owns a tavern 1 1 / 2 miles east of a bridge and across
the Red River from Selkirk, Manitoba. On 6th August 1974
the defendant Nield, while operating his co-defendant's vehicle,
negligently collided with and damaged the bridge, causing it to
be closed for repairs for approximately one month. During the
time the bridge was closed, the travelling distance between
Selkirk and the tavern became 15 miles. Plaintiff seeks dam
ages from defendants for its economic loss caused by many of
its Selkirk patrons suspending their patronage.
The whole of the reasons of Hamilton J. are, to
my mind, instructive and compelling. I shall con
fine myself to citing a portion at pages 82-83:
To do what Harvey suggests, as I understand him, the judge
should say to himself: "If I were this defendant, being a
reasonable man, freed from the prejudice of self-interest, would
I in these circumstances feel a financial obligation to this
plaintiff as a result of my negligence?" In answering that
question in this case I would have to say that while I regretted
any inconvenience that might have been caused, I could hardly
assume the loss. To do so I would equally have to assume loss to
all other users of the bridge who had been put to some expense.
If I was to ask the question as if it were asked prior to the
accident, a more realistic answer might be given: "If I run into
this bridge and cause it to be closed for a month, to whom will I
owe compensation?" My answer might be that I would be
responsible to the bridge authority, but I would not think of
anyone else to whom I owed compensation. I might feel I owed
a duty to the public at large not to damage a public thorough
fare, but if through some unintentional though negligent act, I
did cause the thoroughfare to be closed, I could hardly feel that
I should pay any user of the highway who suffered some loss by
28 [1976] 6 W.W.R. 80 (Hamilton J., Man. Q.B.).
having to detour. If I caused a bridge to be closed, I could
imagine that everyone who used the bridge might suffer eco
nomic loss by having to drive a further distance to their normal
destination. It is possible that merchants in the Town of Selkirk
lost business usually coming from the east side of the river.
While I accept the "neighbour" principle with respect to liabili
ty in tort, there are also normal risks of living and doing
business which one assumes. Every loss or inconvenience in life
cannot give rise to a cause of action.
This test of placing oneself in the shoes of the negligent
person before the occurrence of the negligence would seem to
fit many of the economic loss situations referred to in the cases.
Will I owe a duty to a merchant and should I compensate him
if I Cut his power line—disrupt his telecommunications; destroy
a hydrant and cause water to enter his place of business; give
an inaccurate financial statement on which he may rely? One
could reasonably answer those questions in the affirmative, but
so have the reported cases from which the questions arise.
To answer the question in the affirmative, it appears that
there must be some link between the wrongdoer and the person
suffering loss. While Harvey would have us abandon former
terminology, it appears that the test of foreseeability remains.
That test confines the limits of liability within reason. To
abandon it places compensation at' large and within the limit
less discretion of the judiciary. In my opinion, there must be
rules for determining the limits of liability so that there will be
consistency in the application of the law so that the public,
whether as potential litigants, or merely concerned with pro
tecting themselves by caution or by insurance, will have some
way of predetermining their liability or freedom therefrom.
In the case at bar, liability of the defendant to this plaintiff
is, in my mind, beyond the contemplation of the reasonable
wrongdoer.
and at page 84:
Applying the foreseeability test to the case before me, I
conclude the plaintiff does not fall within the category of
"neighbour" to the defendants. It would not reasonably have
been within the contemplation of defendants that they would
assume responsibility for any damage caused to the plaintiff.
Plaintiff was not sufficiently close to the defendants, or their
acts of negligence, to be within their reasonable contemplation,
either as a neighbour to whom a duty was owed, or as one who
ought reasonably to be compensated. To apply the test accepted
by the Supreme Court—damage to this plaintiff ought not
reasonably to have been in the contemplation of defendants. It
was not reasonably foreseeable.
Counsel for the railways did not assert the Star
Village Tavern case was incorrectly decided. They
contended it was distinguishable. In the case
before me, it is said, the bridge is used by a limited
class of persons, akin to the limited class referred
to in the Haig case; the vessel's master knew the
bridge was used by railways only. I fail to see the
force of this so-called distinction. Should there be
a difference in result if the vessel had struck the
Pattullo Bridge, used by vehicles and pedestrians,
and rendered it unusable? Nor should there be a
difference in result merely because the number in
a limited class is small. The vessel owners here had
no knowledge whether three or three hundred rail
ways used the bridge.
The second Canadian decision is Hunt v. T. W.
Johnstone Co. Ltd. 29 There were three plaintiffs.
The individual plaintiff owned a building. It was
occupied by the corporate plaintiffs. The individu
al plaintiff was, for practical purposes, the owner
of the two companies. One company manufactured
building products on the premises. The other com
pany was the vehicle through which the products
were sold. The defendants negligently caused the
building to catch fire. The building was damaged.
Some of the equipment and stock-in-trade of the
manufacturing company was damaged or
destroyed. Both companies alleged loss of profits.
Hughes J., in respect of the manufacturing com
pany, awarded compensation for the loss of and
damage to equipment, and for certain other mat
ters. He concluded it had not established any loss
of profits. He assessed the loss of profits of the
selling company at $120,000. But he denied it
recovery from the defendants.
He reviewed a number of the cases (including,
of course, the Rivtow decision) which were relied
on by the parties in this litigation. At pages 666-
667 he said:
I therefore conclude that unless there can be discerned an
independent tort against the sufferer of economic loss which is
not consequent upon physical injury, the principle of SCM
(U.K.) Ltd. v. W.J. Whittall & Son Ltd. must still be followed
even though it may be necessary, to use the words of Ritchie,
J., "to follow the sometimes winding paths leading to the
formulation of a `policy decision' ".
A useful discussion of the problem may be found in McGre-
gor on Damages, 13th ed. (1972), p. 52, para. 74ff., in which
the learned author, in discussing SCM (U.K.) Ltd. v. Whittall
& Son Ltd., criticizes Lord Denning, M.R.'s insistence that
"the absence of liability in these cases is based upon remote
ness" and says that this is difficult to support because the
economic loss is clearly foreseeable (p. 53, fn. I1). He con
cludes that "absence of liability in such circumstances would
29 (1977) 69 D.L.R. (3d) 639 (Hughes J., Ont. H.C.). The
reasons in this case are dated February 16, 1976. The reasons
in the Star Tavern case are dated July 19, 1976.
seem to stem from the absence of a duty of care". Here the
question must be asked: Did the defendants owe a duty of care
to the Millwork company? Assuredly they did; but did they also
owe a duty of care to the Hunt company? This is a more
difficult question to answer, because the test of proximity
cannot simply be applied to the physical presence of a corpora
tion under the same roof as the one which has been directly
damaged by loss of its property. The neighbourly duty referred
to in M'Alister (or Donoghue) v. Stevenson, [1932] A.C. 562, is
one extended to the last recipient and consumer of a defective
product, and if the Hunt company had been compelled to suffer
the consequences of accepting the Millwork company's product,
rendered defective as a result of the fire, the defendants would
probably be liable. But the Hunt company, for reasons which I
have referred to, must stand in the same position as any other
buyer of the Millwork company's product, and can conceivably
go out into the market and buy it elsewhere. This, I think,
justifies Lord Denning, M.R.'s insistence on the tests of prox
imity and remoteness, and his view as to the undesirability of
having the one contractor bear the burden of liability to all
those affected who are at one remove from the sufferer of direct
damage. In reaching this conclusion I am not unmindful of the
strong argument developed by Ruttan, J., in his judgment at
the trial of the Rivtow case, but I am inclined to agree that a
plaintiff in the situation of the Hunt company must show, as
Widgery, J. (as he then was), said in Weller & Co. et al. v.
Foot & Mouth Disease Research Institute, [1965] 3 All E.R.
560 at p. 570, "that he was within the scope of the defendant's
duty to take care". After much reflection, and with some
uneasiness in view of the steadily widening scope of liability in
modern tort law, I conclude that the Hunt company, as a mere
seller and distributor of the manufacturer's product was not,
and cannot recover.
In my opinion, the test of foreseeability (includ-
ing "proximity" as described by Lord Atkin) is a
relevant test to apply in the case before me. But it
must be combined with, or followed by, what is, I
think, a third approach.
To my mind, economic loss, even though fore
seeable, ought snot to be recoverable unless it
results directly from the careless act. This third
approach has sometimes been maligned by
commentators. 30 But when combined or intermin
gled with the foreseeability approach, it, in my
view, provides some guide as to whether or not
recovery may be had.
One must go back again to Lord Atkin and his
view of "proximity" of the actors in the drama as
extending:
30 See, for example, Professor Atiyah Negligence and Eco
nomic Loss (1967) 83 L.Q.R. 248 at pp. 262-264.
... to such close and direct relations that the act complained of
directly affects a person whom the person alleged to be bound
to take care would know would be directly affected by his
careless act. 31
In discussing Blacker v. Lake & Elliott Ltd. 106
L.T. 533, he commented at pages 594-595:
With all respect, I think that the judgments in the case err by
seeking to confine the law to rigid and exclusive categories, and
by not giving sufficient attention to the general principle which
governs the whole law of negligence in the duty owed to those
who will be immediately injured by lack of care. [My
underlining.]
I refer once again to the Rivtow case. The
plaintiff was the charterer of a self-loading log
barge. Washington was the designer and manufac
turer of a crane installed on the barge. Walkem
was the distributor and sole representative, in Brit-
ish Columbia, of Washington. Washington had
designed and built similar cranes for other barge
owners. Walkem had been the distributor. There
was a defect in the pintles of the crane. This was
known to both Washington and Walkem. A crane
on another barge collapsed. The plaintiff then
withdrew its crane from service to effect repairs in
order to avoid a similar occurrence. The plaintiff
sued for the cost of repairing and for loss of
earnings while the barge and crane were being
repaired. Washington was held to be negligent in
its design. Both defendants were found to be negli
gent in failing to warn the plaintiff of the danger.
The Trial Judge found the plaintiff could not
recover the amount expended for repairs. He
assessed loss of earnings for the down period at
$90,000 and held the plaintiff was entitled to
recover. But he deducted from that an amount of
$30,000
... earnings which would have been lost in any event for the
30-day period required by the plaintiff to make repairs had it
been properly warned by the defendants. 32
In the Supreme Court of Canada, the trial
judgment was affirmed by Ritchie J. speaking for
himself and six other members of the Court.
Laskin J. [as he then was] and Hall J. dissented.
31 Donoghue v. Stevenson [1932] A.C. 562 at p. 581.
32 Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works (1970) 74
W.W.R. 110 at 131.
As I interpret the case, the dissent does not indi
cate a real difference in view as to approaches to
be used in cases of this kind. The fundamental
dispute between the parties was whether the plain
tiff could legally recover anything from the
defendants. All members of the Court agreed that
the plaintiff was entitled to recover. Laskin and
Hall JJ. went a step further. They held the plain
tiff was entitled, as well, to the cost of repairing
the crane—the expense incurred in making it safe.
There was no discussion, in either judgment, of the
$30,000 deduction in respect of loss of profits.
The reasons of Ritchie J. did not really touch
upon the question of loss directly caused, except in
this sentence 33 :
Page 1210:
Finding as I do that there was in this case a breach of a duty
to warn which constituted negligence on the part of both
respondents, and that the economic loss solely attributable to
the interruption of the appellant's business during "coastal
operations" was the immediate consequence of that breach, I
come to consider the question of whether such damage is
recoverable in an action for negligence. [My underlining.]
The reasons of Laskin J. did:
Page 1216:
This is the first occasion upon which this Court has been
called upon to determine whether recovery may be had in a
negligence action for economic loss which stands alone and is
not consequent upon physical injury. The trial judge awarded
damages for loss of earnings suffered by the appellant for a
certain down period required for repairs to the pintle crane, but
he denied recovery for the cost of repairs to make the faultily-
designed and manufactured crane fit for service. In this view he
is sustained in the reasons of my brother Ritchie which I have
had an opportunity to read. I agree with the award of damages
so far as it goes, but I would enlarge it to include as well the
cost of repairs.
Page 1217:
Two new points are involved in this question. The first is
whether Washington's liability for negligence should embrace
economic loss when there has been no physical harm in fact,
and the second is whether the appellant is a proper plaintiff to
recover for economic loss and as well the cost of repairing the
defective crane.
Pages 1218-1219:
Support for such recovery in the present case will not lead to
33 [1974] S.C.R. 1189.
"liability in an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time
to an indeterminate class", to borrow an often-quoted state
ment of the late Judge Cardozo in Ultrarnares Corp. v. Touche
[(1931), 255 N.Y. 170], at p. 179. The pragmatic consider
ations which underlay Cattle v. Stockton Waterworks Co.
[(1875), 10 Q.B. 453] will not be eroded by the imposition of
liability upon Washington as a negligent designer and manu
facturer: cf. Fleming James, "Limitations on Liability for
Economic Loss Caused by Negligence: A Pragmatic Apprais
al", (1972), 12 Jo. S.P.T.L. 105. Liability here will not mean
that it must also be imposed in the case of any negligent
conduct where there is foreseeable economic loss; a typical
instance would be claims by employees for lost wages where
their employer's factory has been damaged and is shut down by
reason of another's negligence. The present case is concerned
with direct economic loss by a person whose use of the defend
ant Washington's product was a contemplated one, and not
with indirect economic loss by third parties, for example,
persons whose logs could not be loaded on the appellant's barge
because of the withdrawal of the defective crane from service to
undergo repairs. It is concerned (and here I repeat myself) with
economic loss resulting directly from avoidance of threatened
physical harm to property of the appellant if not also personal
injury to persons in its employ. [My underlining.]
It seems to me the railway companies claim here
is akin to that of the persons whose logs could not
be loaded: the railways' cars could not run across
the bridge because of the withdrawal of the bridge
for service to undergo repairs.
I earlier indicated my conclusion that the dis
senting reasons of Edmund Davies L.J. in the
Spartan Steel case are in accord with the Canadi-
an position as set out in the Rivtow case. He used
the combined approach of reasonable foreseeabili-
ty and direct consequence, in that case, to permit
recovery and to impose liability. He was careful to
point out that it had been conceded the defendants
owed a duty of care to the particular plaintiff, and
had breached it. Rather than summarize (and
knowing I am further lengthening these already
too long reasons) it is preferable to set out the
precise language used 34 :
Pages 39-40:
The facts giving rise to this appeal have already been set out
by Lord Denning M.R. Their very simplicity serves to highlight
a problem regarding which differing judicial and academic
views have been expressed and which it is high time should be
finally solved. The problem may be thus stated: Where a
34 [1973] 1 Q.B. 27.
defendant who owes a duty of care to the plaintiff breaches that
duty and, as both a direct and a reasonably foreseeable result of
that injury, the plaintiff suffers only economic loss, is he
entitled to recover damages for that loss?
In expressing in this way the question which now arises for
determination, I have sought to strip away those accretions
which would otherwise obscure the basic issue involved. Let me
explain. We are not here concerned to inquire whether the
defendants owed a duty of care to the plaintiffs or whether they
breached it, for these matters are admitted. Nor need we delay
to consider whether as a direct and reasonably foreseeable
result of the defendants' negligence any harm was sustained by
the plaintiffs, for a "melt" valued at £368 was admittedly
ruined and the defendants concede their liability to make that
loss good. But what is in issue is whether the defendants must
make good (a) the £400 loss of profit resulting from that
material being spoilt and (b) the £1,767 further loss of profit
caused by the inability to put four more "melts" through the
furnace before power was restored. As to (a), the defendants,
while making no unqualified admission, virtually accept their
liability, on the ground that the £400 loss was a direct conse
quence of the physical damage caused to the material in the
furnace. But they reject liability in respect of (b), not because it
was any the less a direct and reasonably foreseeable conse
quence of the defendants' negligence than was the £400, but on
the ground that it was unrelated to any physical damage and
that economic loss not anchored to and resulting from physical
harm to person or property is not recoverable under our law as
damages for negligence.
In my respectful judgment, however it may formerly have
been regarded, the law is today otherwise. I am conscious of the
boldness involved in expressing this view, particularly after
studying such learned dissertations as that of Professor Atiyah
on Negligence and Economic Loss (1967) 83 L.Q.R. 248,
where the relevant cases are cited. I recognise that proof of the
necessary linkage between negligent acts and purely economic
consequences may be hard to forge. I accept, too, that if
economic loss of itself confers a right of action this may spell
disaster for the negligent party. But this may equally be the
outcome where physical damage alone is sustained, or whether
physical damage leads directly to economic loss. Nevertheless,
when this occurs it was accepted in S.C.M. (United Kingdom)
Ltd. v. W.J. Whittall & Son Ltd. [1971] 1 Q.B. 337 that
compensation is recoverable for both types of damage. It
follows that this must be regardless of whether the injury
(physical or economic, or a mixture of both) is immense or
puny, diffused over a wide area or narrowly localised, provided
only that the requirements as to foreseeability and directness
are fulfilled. I therefore find myself unable to accept as factors
determinant of legal principle those considerations of policy
canvassed in the concluding passages of the judgment just
delivered by Lord -Denning M.R.
Page 41:
For my part, I cannot see why the £400 loss of profit here
sustained should be recoverable and not the £1,767. It is
common ground that both types of loss were equally foreseeable
and equally direct consequences of the defendants' admitted
negligence, and the only distinction drawn is that the former
figure represents the profit lost as a result of the physical
damage done to the material in the furnace at the time when
power was cut off. But what has that purely fortuitous fact to
do with legal principle? In my judgment, nothing, and I would
seek no stronger support for my answer than the following
passage from the judgment of Lord Denning M.R. himself in
S.C.M. (United Kingdom) Ltd. v. W.J. Whittall & Son Ltd.
[1971] 1 Q.B. 337....
Page 45:
Having considered the intrinsic nature of the problem pre
sented in this appeal, and having consulted the relevant
authorities, my conclusion, as already indicated, is that an
action lies in negligence for damages in respect of purely
economic loss, provided that it was a reasonably foreseeable
and direct consequence of failure in a duty of care. The
application of such a rule can undoubtedly give rise to difficul
ties in certain sets of circumstances, but so can the suggested
rule that economic loss may be recovered provided it is directly
consequential upon physical damage.
Page 46:
I should perhaps again stress that we are here dealing with
economic loss which was both reasonably foreseeable and a
direct consequence of the defendants' negligent act. What the
position should or would be were the latter feature lacking (as
in Weller & Co. v. Foot and Mouth Disease Research Institute
[1966] 1 Q.B. 569) is not our present concern. By stressing this
point one is not reviving the distinction between direct and
indirect consequences which is generally thought to have been
laid at rest by The Wagon Mound [1961] A.C. 388, for, in the
words of Professor Atiyah, Negligence and Economic Loss, 83
L.Q.R. 263, that case
was solely concerned with the question whether the direct
ness of the damage is a sufficient test of liability, ... In other
words, The Wagon Mound merely decides that a plaintiff
cannot recover for unforeseeable consequences even if they
are direct; it does not decide that a plaintiff can always
recover for foreseeable consequences even if they are
indirect.
Both directness and foreseeability being here established, it
follows that I regard Faulks J. as having rightly awarded the
sum of £2,535. [My underlining.]
Mr. Harvey, commenting on the reasons of
Laskin J. in the Rivtow case said this 35 :
Laskin J. adverted to what is really the fundamental reason
for caution when courts deal with economic loss cases, namely
the fear of creating a wide and indeterminate liability which
would give rise to an unmanageable flood of claims. He then
considered two traditional concepts which were satisfied in this
case and which he appears to have accepted as being capable of
limiting liability in this field. They were treated as essential
prerequisites of liability for economic loss. One was foreseea-
35 (1974) 37 Modern Law Rev. 320 at pp. 323-324.
bility of injury to person or property and the other was the
direct nature of the economic loss.
These two control-devices have been discussed in some recent
English decisions. They are not beyond criticism but if they are
used in conjunction with sound considerations of policy or
rationale (which is the same thing), then they are probably
sufficient for the intended task: to control liability in a way
which is both just and socially beneficial in future cases of
economic loss caused by dangerous products.
In my opinion, the reasonably foreseeable and
direct consequence tests ought to be applied to the
facts before me.
But before that final step, there is a preliminary
question: did the vessel, and those having charge of
her owe a duty of care to these particular plain
tiffs? The Atkinian approach 36 holds that a duty
of reasonable care (not to harm) is owed to "your
neighbour". Neighbours are said to be those per
sons who are so closely and directly affected that
the author of the careless act or omission ought
reasonably to have had those particular persons in
contemplation at the material time.
My answer to the preliminary question, on the
evidence before me, is "No". In my opinion, the
railway companies were not persons so closely and
directly affected that those having charge of the
vessel ought reasonably to have had the railways in
contemplation when the vessel was proceeding
toward the bridge (or if they had, at any time, put
their minds to the matter).
The owners of the bridge were however, as I see
it, within the scope of a duty of care on the part of
those responsible for the vessel. Sheppard D.J. has
so found. The contest before him was whether the
contact with the bridge was the fault of the bridge
owner's servants, the fault of those navigating the
vessel, or the fault of both. He did not decide, nor
36 I have not overlooked the cautionary words of Lord Reid in
Dorset Yacht Co. Ltd. v. Home Office [1970] A.C. 1004 at
1027 in respect of the well known passage in Lord Atkin's
speech:
It is not to be treated as if it were a statutory definition.
or the comment of Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest at 1034:
It has been generally recognized that Lord Atkin's state
ment of principle cannot be applied as though his words were
contained in a positive and precise legislative exactment.
was he asked to determine, whether there was
negligence, in law, vis-Ã -vis the railway companies.
When I now come to apply the tests or limiting
devices spoken of by Laskin J. (now C.J.) and
Edmund Davies L.J., I again deny recovery to the
railways and absolve the vessel from liability to
compensate. The railways' economic loss was not,
in my opinion, a direct and reasonably foreseeable
result of the striking of the bridge by the vessel.
Finally, I add this. Even if I had been persuaded
the railways had an easement, my reasoning and
conclusions would be the same.
The action of the railways as against the vessel
is dismissed. Her owners are entitled to costs.
APPENDIX
Books
Millner, Negligence in Modern Law, 1967, pp.
60-63.
Salmond on Torts (16th ed.) 1973, pp. 203-212.
Street, The Law of Torts (6th ed.) 1976, pp.
109-114.
Winfield & Jolowicz on Tort (10th ed.) 1975, pp.
45-59.
Periodical Literature
Atiyah, Negligence and Economic Loss (1967) 83
L.Q.R. 248.
Binchy, Negligence and Economic Loss (Rivtow)
(1974) 90 L.Q.R. 181.
Brown, The Recovery of Economic Loss In Tort
(1972-75) 2 Auckland Univ. Law Rev. 50.
Craig, Negligent Misstatements, Negligent Acts
and Economic Loss (1976) 92 L.Q.R. 213.
Haines, (Comment on Seaway Hotels Ltd. v.
Gragg) (1961) 19 U. of Tor. Faculty of Law Rev.
191.
Harvey, Negligent Statements—The Wilderness
Revisited (1970) Part II vol. 120 New Law Jo.
1155.
Harvey, Economic Losses and Negligence (1972)
50 Can. B. Rev. 580.
Harvey, (Comment on Rivtow) (1974) 37 Mod.
Law Rev. 320.
Newbury (Comment on Rivtow) (1972) 7 U.B.C.
Law Rev. 303.
Smith, J. C. "... Economic Loss, A Test Case"
(1974) 9 U.B.C. Law Rev. 213.
Wallace, From Babylon to Babel ... (case com
ment) (1977) 93 L.Q.R. 16.
, (Case Comment on Union Oil v. Oppen)
(1974-75) 88 Harvard Law Rev. 444.
Cases
Canadian
Seaway Hotels Ltd. v. Consumer's Gas Co. [1959]
O.R. 177 (Ont. H.C.).
Seaway Hotels Ltd. v. Consumers Gas Co. [ 1959]
O.R. 581 (Ont. C.A.).
Courtenay v. Knutson (1961) 26 D.L.R. (2d) 768
(B.C.S.C.).
Marine Pipeline and Dredging Ltd. v. Pryde,
Flavin & Associates Ltd. (1965) 52 W.W.R. 680
(Alta. S.C.).
Weiner v. Zoratti (1970) 72 W.W.R. 299 (Man.
Q.B.).
Dominion Tape of Canada Ltd. v. L.R. McDonald
and Sons Ltd. [1971] 3 O.R. 627 (Co. Ct.).
School Division of Assiniboine South, No. 3 v.
Greater Winnipeg Gas Company Limited [1971] 4
W.W.R. 746 (Man. C.A.).
Welbridge Holdings Ltd. v. The Metropolitan
Corporation of Greater Winnipeg [1971] S.C.R.
957.
J. Nunes Diamonds Ltd. v. Dominion Electric
Protection Company [ 1972] S.C.R. 769.
Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works
(1970) 74 W.W.R. 110 (B.C.S.C.).
Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works
[1972] 3 W.W.R. 735 (B.C.C.A.).
Rivtow Marine Ltd. v. Washington Iron Works
[1974] S.C.R. 1189.
Groves—Raffin Construction Ltd. and Fidelity
Insurance Company of Canada v. Bank of Nova
Scotia [1975] 2 W.W.R. 97 (B.C.S.C.).
Farish v. National Trust Company Limited
[1975] 3 W.W.R. 499 (B.C.S.C.).
Agnew-Surpass Shoe Stores Ltd. v. Cummer-
Yonge Investments Ltd. (1975) 55 D.L.R. (3d)
676 (S.C.C.).
Star Village Tavern v. Nield [1976] 6 W.W.R. 80
(Man. Q.B.).
Haig v. Bamford [1977] 1 S.C.R. 466.
Hunt v. T. W. Johnstone Co. Ltd. (1977) 69
D.L.R. (3d) 639 (Ont. H.C.).
English
Cattle v. The Stockton Waterworks Co. (1875)
L.R. 10 Q.B. 453.
M'Alister (or Donoghue) v. Stevenson [1932] A.C.
562 (H.L.).
Morrison Steamship Company Limited v. Grey-
stoke Castle [ 1947] A.C. 265 (H.L.).
Candler v. Crane, Christmas & Co. [1951] 2 K.B.
164 (C.A.).
Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners
Ltd. [1964] A.C. 465 (H.L.).
Weller & Co. v. Foot and Mouth Disease
Research Institute [1965] 3 All E.R. 560
(Q.B.D.).
Electrochrome, Ltd. v. Welsh Plastics, Ltd. [1968]
2 All E.R. 205 (Q.B.D.).
British Celanese, Ltd. v. A.H. Hunt (Capacitors)
Ltd. [1969] 2 All E.R. 1252 (Q.B.D.).
S.C.M. (United Kingdom) Ltd. v. W.J. Whittall &
Son Ltd. [1970] 3 All E.R. 245 (C.A.).
Ministry of Housing and Local Government v.
Sharp [1970] 2 Q.B. 223 (C.A.).
Home Office v. Dorset Yacht Co. Ltd. [1970] A.C.
1004 (H.L.).
Dutton v. Bognor Regis Urban District Council
[1972] 1 Q.B. 373 (C.A.).
Spartan Steel & Alloys Ltd. v. Martin & Co.
(Contractors) Ltd. [1973] 1 Q.B. 27 (C.A.).
American
Union Oil Company v. Oppen 501 F. 2d 558
(1974) (U.S. Ct. of Appeals, Ninth Circuit).
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.