Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-956-75
CAE Industries Ltd. and CAE Aircraft Ltd. (Plaintiffs)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Collier J.-Winnipeg, February 19, 20, 21, 22, 25, 26, 27, 28, March 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 13, 17, 18, 19, 20, April 7, 8, 9; Vancouver, July 31, 1982.
Crown - Contracts - Ministerial authority to bind Crown - At request of Air Canada and Crown representatives, Northwest, subsidiary of plaintiff CAE Industries, bid to take over Winnipeg air base facility - Reluctant to do so without commitment from Crown to provide certain number of man- hours of labour per year - Letter signed by Transport Minis ter and concurred in by two other Ministers assuring plaintiff DDP would guarantee 40,000-50,000 man-hours of labour per year from 1971-1976 and that Government of Canada would employ best efforts to secure additional work from other departments and Crown corporations to meet 700,000 direct labour man-hours target - Defendant submitting no legal contract because according to The Queen v. Transworld Ship ping Ltd., [1976] 1 F.C. 159 (C.A.) authority of Minister to bind Crown must be found in statute or Order in Council, and none existing here - Defendant also submitting letter merely agreement to agree, and non-joinder of Northwest as plaintiff fatal to action - Letter creating valid, enforceable contract J. E. Verreault & Fils Ltée v. Attorney General of the Province of Quebec, [1977] 1 S.C.R. 41 declaring proposition in Transworld Shipping too narrow, applies - Implied or osten sible authority for Ministers to bind Crown found in liberal, reasonable reading of legislation setting up departments for which Ministers responsible - Parties intending contract to be binding and treating it as such - Letter was concluded bargain leaving nothing to be settled by future agreement Addition of Northwest serving no useful purpose and R. 1716 providing no action defeated by non-joinder - "Best efforts" equivalent to "use their best endeavours" meaning "leave no stone unturned" - Evidence that defendant did not provide guaranteed DDP work in four of five years and did not use best efforts to meet shortfall - Defence Production Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 62, ss. 14, 15(b),(d),(g), 17 - Department of Transport Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 79, s. 3(2) - Aeronautics Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 2, s. 3(d) - Department of Trade and Com merce Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 78, ss. 3, 5 - Federal Court Rules, C. R. C., c. 663, R. 1716.
Practice — Parties — Defendant claiming non-joinder of Northwest Industries as plaintiff fatal to action, agreement having been made with Northwest and there being no legal assignment in writing — Addition of Northwest serving no useful purpose there being an equitable assignment — R. 1716 providing no action defeated by non-joinder — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 1716.
Action for damages for breach of an agreement allegedly made with the Crown. The plaintiff CAE Industries Ltd. was approached by Air Canada and representatives of the federal Crown to purchase a Winnipeg air base facility, owned and operated by Air Canada, and to continue an aircraft repair and overhaul operation in that City to avoid the loss of 1,000 skilled jobs. Negotiations involving CAE Industries, Air Canada, fed eral and provincial government officials took place during which Northwest Industries, a subsidiary of CAE Industries, repeatedly requested commitments for a certain number of man-hours of work per year for several years. On March 26, 1969, the plaintiff CAE Industries Ltd. received a letter from the Minister of Transport, concurred in by two other Ministers, stating that the Government of Canada agreed that 700,000 man-hours of direct labour per year was a realistic target for the operation of a viable enterprise. Although DDP could only guarantee 40,000 to 50,000 direct man-hours per year from 1971 to 1976, the Government of Canada would employ its "best efforts" to secure the additional work required from other government departments and Crown corporations to meet the target level of 700,000 direct labour man-hours. Northwest and Air Canada signed a memorandum of agreement in April. In September, an agreement among Air Canada, Northwest and CAE Aircraft was signed which included an assignment by Northwest to CAE Aircraft of the April agreement. The first major issue is whether the defendant entered into a valid and enforceable agreement with CAE Industries. The plaintiff con tends that lengthy negotiations led to the March 26 letter which set out the terms of the agreement, that the parties intended it to be binding and acted accordingly. The defendant relied on The Queen v. Transworld Shipping Ltd., a decision of the Federal Court of Appeal, in arguing that the Ministers had no authority to bind the Crown, that such authority must be found in a statute or Order in Council, neither of which existed here. The defendant submitted that the March 26 letter was unenforceable because critical parts concerning the provision of man-hours of work had been left undetermined. The letter was merely an agreement to agree. Finally, it was argued that the letter agreement was made with Northwest and not the plain tiffs, and therefore Northwest must be a party, there being no legal assignment in writing. Other issues concerned the terms of the agreement, whether the agreement was breached by the defendant and the nature and quantum of damages.
Held, the action is allowed. The letter created a valid, enforceable agreement between CAE Industries Ltd. and the defendant. The evidence showed that senior civil servants,
ministers and many others treated the arrangement as a bind ing commitment. The principle in Transworld Shipping was considered by the Supreme Court of Canada in J. E. Verreault & Fils Ltée v. Attorney General of the Province of Quebec and found to be too restrictive. In that case, apparent or ostensible authority was found in the relevant provincial legislation. Nei ther a specific Order in Council nor a specific statutory provi sion was required. The authority was implied. The defendant's interpretation of the statutes setting up the departments managed and directed by the Ministers who signed the March 26 letter is far too narrow. A liberal, reasonable reading of the relevant sections of the Defence Production Act gives the Minister authority to enter into a contract providing for a commitment of so many hours of work. Paragraph 17(1)(d) provides that any contract shall not be entered into without the approval of the Governor in Council. The Verreault case is applicable. There was implied or ostensible approval. A formal Order in Council was not required. Since the Minister of Transport had statutory authority under subsection 3(2) of the Department of Transport Act and paragraph 3(d) of the Aeronautics Act to contract for the repair and overhaul of Department of Transport aircraft and equipment, he could also agree to provide a certain amount of man-hours of work. Likewise the Department of Trade and Commerce had wide powers which conceivably might result in the directing of aircraft work, and therefore man-hours of labour, to the plaintiffs.
Concerning the submission that the March 26 letter was merely an agreement to agree, it was held that from .a strict legal view, no further matters had to be agreed upon. The defendant agreed to provide a guaranteed number of man- hours and to use its best efforts to make up any shortfall between what was realized by the plaintiffs from that and other sources, up to 700,000 hours per year. The letter was a concluded bargain. It left nothing to be settled by future agreement. What was left to be determined was by the defend ant alone: how to carry out the obligations it had undertaken.
As to the issue of contracting parties, on the evidence, there is no doubt that there was an equitable assignment from Northwest to CAE Aircraft of any rights Northwest had under the March 26 letter, and there is equally no doubt all concerned knew that CAE Aircraft was going to carry on the operation of the Winnipeg base. The addition of Northwest would not serve any useful purpose. Further, Rule 1716 provides that no action shall be defeated by reason of non-joinder of any party.
The terms of the agreement were that (1) the parties agreed that 700,000 man-hours per year of direct labour was a realistic target for an effective operation (2) DDP guaranteed 40,000 to 50,000 direct labour man-hours in the years 1971 to 1976 as "set aside" repair and overhaul work (3) the Government of Canada agreed to employ its best efforts to secure additional work from other departments and Crown corporations in respect of any shortfall up to 700,000 hours per year for the years 1971 to 1976. The words "will employ its best efforts"
are equivalent to "use their best endeavours" as interpreted to mean "leave no stone unturned" in Sheffield District Railway Company v. Great Central Railway Company. The defendant did not provide the agreed DDP work in four of the five years in question. It also did not, through the Government of Canada, use its best efforts to make up any shortfall up to 700,000 hours and accordingly breached the agreement.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
J. E. Verreault & Fils Ltée v. Attorney General of the Province of Quebec, [1977] 1 S.C.R. 41; May & Butcher, Ltd. v. The King, [1934] 2 K.B. 17 (H.L.); Sheffield District Railway Company v. Great Central Railway Company (1911), 27 T.L.R. 451 (Rail and Canal Com.).
NOT FOLLOWED:
The Queen v. Transworld Shipping Ltd., [1976] 1 F.C. 159 (C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Meates v. Attorney General, [1979] 1 NZLR 415 (S.C.).
CONSIDERED:
Diamond Developments Ltd. v. Crown Assets Disposal Corp. (1972), 28 D.L.R. (3d) 207 (B.C.S.C.).
REFERRED TO:
Walsh Advertising Company Limited v. The Queen, [1962] Ex.C.R. 115; Terrell v. Mabie Todd & Coy Ld. (1952), 69 R.P.C. 234 (Q.B.D.); Randall v. Peerless Motor Car Co., 99 N.E. 221 (1912) (S.C. Mass.); In Re Heard (1980), 6 B.R. 876; Canada Square Corp. Ltd. v. Versafood Services Ltd. et al. (1982), 130 D.L.R. (3d) 205 (Ont. C.A.).
COUNSEL:
L. N. Mercury, D. G. Hill and M. M. Monnin for plaintiffs.
L. P. Chambers, Q.C., R. W. Cote and D. Kubesh for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Aikins, MacAulay & Thorvaldson, Win- nipeg, for plaintiffs.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
COLLIER J.: The plaintiffs claim substantial damages for breach of an agreement alleged to have been made with the federal Crown.
Prior to 1967, Air Canada owned and operated a major air base facility in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Air Canada determined to move that base to Mon- treal, Quebec. The plaintiff, CAE Industries Ltd. (hereinafter "CAE"), was approached by Air Canada and representatives of the federal Crown to purchase the Winnipeg base, and to continue an aircraft repair and overhaul operation in that City. CAE alleges it asked for commitments and assur ances, in respect of man-hours of work, for the years 1971 to 1976 inclusive, from the "Canadian Government"; that the defendant agreed to certain commitments and guarantees; the defendant breached the agreement; the plaintiffs have suf fered loss and damage.
The plaintiffs rely heavily on a letter to CAE, dated March 26, 1969, from the Minister of Transport. The letter was concurred in by the Minister of Trade and Commerce and the Minister of Defence Production.
The monetary claim put forward is:
$2,520,000 for loss of profits 3,400,000 capital loss.
The parties agreed on a statement of issues:
1. Did the defendant enter into a valid and enforceable agreement with the plaintiff CAE Industries Ltd.?
2. If there was such an agreement, what were its terms?
3. If there was such an agreement, did the defendant breach any of its terms and, if so, which terms?
4. If the defendant breached any of the terms of such agreement, what were the nature and quantum of damages flowing from such breach?
5. If there was no such agreement, did the defendant by the letter of March 26, 1969, make negligent misrepresentations to the plain tiff CAE Industries and, if so:
(a) Have the plaintiffs suffered any damages as a result and, if so,
(b) What were the nature and quantum of such damages?
A fairly lengthy history is necessary.
In its early years the operations of Air Canada (formerly T.C.A.) were centralized in Winnipeg. In 1949 an operating and maintenance base was begun in Montreal. In 1959, a large, modern over haul base was completed in that City.
In 1962 Air Canada expressed an intention to close its Winnipeg base. This brought strenuous protest. The loss of up to 1,000 highly skilled jobs in the Winnipeg area was the likely result of any close-down. At that time the main overhaul and maintenance work at Air Canada's Winnipeg base was its Viscount fleet.
The Prime Minister of the day, in late 1963 and early 1964, stated government policy was to keep the Winnipeg base, in some manner, open. A Royal Commission was established to review the whole matter. The Commission made a number of recommendations. But subsequent negotiations, to work out an acceptable plan to keep the Winnipeg base open, floundered.
In early October, 1967, Air Canada announced its Viscount fleet would, by 1970, drop to such an extent that the Winnipeg base would be closed. This announcement led to meetings between the federal Minister of Transport and the Province of Manitoba. Three results of this meeting were (see Ex. P. 150-151):
(1) The Minister of Transport reaffirmed the Prime Minis ter's earlier commitment but pointed out that this did not necessarily mean direct operation by Air Canada although it would require substantial support by Air Canada.
(2) Air Canada was asked to review its aircraft overhaul requirements in the light of changes in circumstances subse quent to the completion of the Royal Commission Report.
(3) An inter-governmental working party was established to study the various proposed solutions to the problem.
I digress to a short history of the plaintiffs. CAE was founded in 1947 as Canadian Aviation Elec tronics Ltd. Until about 1960 its main activities were in defence work in respect of electronic air craft matters. From 1960 onward it expanded. By 1966 it had seven operating divisions in various fields.
At the date of trial CAE was, and had been, essentially a holding and management company. It had sixteen operating subsidiary companies. It operated as a kind of super board of directors for the subsidiaries.
One of CAE's subsidiaries was a company called Northwest Industries Ltd., ("Northwest"). It had, from some time in the 1950's, been engaged in the repair and overhaul of aircraft, mostly military. Its base was in Edmonton.
In 1967 the President and Chief Executive Offi cer of CAE was C. D. Reekie. In the summer of that year he was approached by G. T. Rayner, Director of the Aerospace Branch, Department of Industry. Rayner wanted to know if CAE would be interested in some arrangement in respect of utiliz ing the Winnipeg base, following Air Canada's departure from it.
Reekie consulted with his subordinates. CAE expressed interest. A "bare bones" proposal was put forward by CAE in October, 1967. This pro posal was to involve Northwest.
Negotiations continued from then on. There were not just negotiations with federal officials and departments. There were negotiations, as to a take-over agreement, with Air Canada as well.
Throughout all this, CAE personnel, Air Canada representatives, and others, took part in various meetings, in 1968, of the inter-governmen tal working party.
On February 24, 1968, Northwest submitted a formal proposal for a "... proposed take over of Air Canada Maintenance Base—Winnipeg" (Ex. P. 8). Northwest stipulated, among other things, that the Department of National Defence (DND) assume responsibility to provide, for an agreed number of years, not less than 300,000 direct labour hours per year. The proposal set out the programme to be contributed by Northwest, DND (apart from the 300,000 hours) and Air Canada. The latter was to leave its Viscount repair and overhaul, until those aircraft were phased out, to the new operators.
No written reply was received to this proposal.
There was a meeting of the federal-provincial working party in Ottawa on May 28, 1968.
Reekie, and Northwest's President, E. L. Bun- nell, attended a part of the meeting. They described the Northwest proposal in some detail. Reekie said Northwest was not interested in taking over the base, and then, if there were insufficient work, having to close it. He indicated Northwest would need an assurance of at least 300,000 man- hours of work per year, for seven years, from some source. That was to be in addition to any work provided by Air Canada and work generated by Northwest itself. The Northwest people, at the meeting, itemized work which they felt could come from DND.
Some time later, Northwest advised Rayner that 700,000 hours of direct labour per year would be necessary for a viable operation. The break-down contemplated 300,000 hours per year from DND.
The federal-provincial working party's minutes of June 27, 1968, record Rayner's view as:
... the 300,000 hours of new business to be arrived [sic] from DND allocations in 1971 is completely unrealistic under exist ing official federal government policies (Ex. P. 10).
But further negotiations were contemplated. They, in fact, took place.
Air Canada drew up draft agreements for con sideration by Northwest. Northwest continued dis cussions with government officials. At a further meeting of the federal-provincial working party on July 23, 1968, the following was recorded:
Negotiations between Air Canada and NWI are proceeding satisfactorily with respect to the ways and means by which NWI might take over certain physical and personnel resources from Air Canada and undertake work for Air Canada in Winnipeg. However, prior to executing an agreement with Air Canada, NWI has insisted upon assurance that it will receive 300,000 manhours of additional work commencing in 1971 and over and above the 400,000 manhours which it expects to receive from Air Canada and its own efforts.
In early January, 1969, Northwest submitted a formal proposal to Air Canada. At page 34 of that document, this stipulation appeared:
We must repeat again that unless and until firm commit ments totalling 300,000 productive hours per annum until 1976 are made we will be unwilling to take over and operate the Winnipeg Maintenance Base. It is a condition of our proposal, therefore, that commitments be made by Air Canada and/or the Canadian Government to provide 300,000 hours of produc tive work annually until 1976 over and above that work gener ated by Northwest Industries Limited. Without such a commit ment we cannot undertake to maintain employment on existing levels, nor can we be confident of our ability to develop a lasting and healthy industry for the Province of Manitoba.
Next, Reekie was requested by E. L. Hewson, the Director of Transportation Policy & Research in the Transport Department, to set out CAE's requests. That was done on February 28, 1969.
The reply to Reekie was the letter I have earlier referred to, signed by the Minister of Transport and concurred in by the two other Ministers. I set out that letter in full:
THE MINISTER OF TRANSPORT
OTTAWA, March 26, 1969.
Mr. C.D. Reekie,
President,
CAE Industries Ltd.,
P.O. Box 6166,
Montreal 3, P.Q.
Dear Mr. Reekie:
On February 28, 1969, you wrote to Mr. E.L. Hewson of the Department of Transport asking for certain assurances in con nection with the proposed purchase of Air Canada's Winnipeg Maintenance Base by Northwest Industries- Ltd., a subsidiary of CAE Industries Ltd. On the basis of an agreement having been signed by your firm and by Air Canada, the undersigned have been authorized to provide the following assurances in this matter:
(a) The Government of Canada agrees with the objective that present employment levels should be maintained and that every possible effort should be made to assist in the development of a viable and continuing aerospace industry in Winnipeg.
(b) It also agrees that 700,000 manhours of direct labour per annum is a realistic target for the operation of a viable enterprise in these facilities and that current estimates of future workload suggest a potential gap between actual and minimum levels in the years 1971 to 1976 unless new repair and overhaul work or aerospace manufacturing contracts can be obtained.
(c) The Department of Defence Production can guarantee no more than 40,000 to 50,000 direct labour manhours per year in the period 1971-1976 as "set-aside" repair and overhaul
work, but the Government of Canada will employ its best efforts to secure the additional work required from other government departments and crown corporations to meet the target level of 700,000 direct labour manhours.
(d) In fulfilling the commitment set out in (c) above, the Government of Canada agrees that any additional work allocated to the Winnipeg Maintenance Base will not be taken from government contract work presently carried out by Northwest Industries in Edmonton.
(e) It further agrees that the existing Air Canada lease from the Department of Transport will be assigned to NWI under present financial terms and conditions for a period of ten years.
Yours sincerely,
Paul T. Hellyer
Concurred in by:
Hon. J.L. Pépin,
Minister of Trade and Commerce
Hon. D.C. Jamieson,
Minister of Defence Production
I isolate the key words relied on by the plaintiffs:
... the Government of Canada will employ its best efforts to secure the additional work required from other government departments and crown corporations to meet the target level of 700,000 direct labour manhours.
Cabinet of the day had, on March 20, 1969, authorized the three Ministers to sign the letter of March 26.
A memorandum of agreement between North west and Air Canada was signed on April 2, 1969. Air Canada agreed, among other things, to provide 100,000 man-hours of work per annum for 1971 through 1975. This was in addition to the mainte nance work on the Viscounts which were being phased out.
The second plaintiff CAE Aircraft Ltd. ("Air- craft") was incorporated on April 7, 1969. It was wholly owned by CAE. It was funded, through CAE, in the sum of $100,000.
A number of agreements between Aircraft and Air Canada, all dated September 1, 1969, were entered into.
One provided for Aircraft to perform mainte nance on the Viscount fleet. There was, in addi tion, a commitment to provide 100,000 man-hours per annum of work for 1971 to 1975 inclusive. Another provided for the sale, by Air Canada to Aircraft, of certain tools and equipment. The price
was $120,000. Still another provided for the sale of certain buildings to Aircraft at a price of $300,- 000. A fourth agreement provided for the supply, by Air Canada to Aircraft, of certain materials in respect of the Viscount programme.
On September 3, 1969, an agreement among Air Canada, Northwest and Aircraft was signed. It provided for several matters, including an assignment by Northwest to Aircraft of North- west's agreement of April 2, 1969. That document, it will be recalled, provided for Viscount work, and a further 100,000 man-hours per annum.
On September 18, 1969, certain airport land was leased by the defendant to Aircraft.
On September 3, 1969, the take-over by the CAE companies of the Air Canada base was com pleted. Aircraft began actively carrying on busi ness. Things went reasonably well for a while. But commencing in 1971, the plaintiffs' work-load began to diminish. The plaintiffs from then, until this litigation was commenced in 1975, constantly took the position the federal government was not complying with the alleged binding commitments in the March 26, 1969 letter. I shall later deal with those facts in more detail.
The first major issue is whether the defendant entered into a valid and enforceable agreement with CAE.
The plaintiffs' position is there were lengthy negotiations leading up to the March 26 letter; that letter set out the terms of the agreement reached; the parties intended it to be legally bind ing; the parties acted upon it.
The defendant's position is the letter of March 26, 1969 did not, for a number of reasons, create an enforceable contractual obligation on the Crown.
It was said, first, the three Ministers had no authority to bind the Crown to the kind of contract alleged; the authority of any person, including ministers, to bind the Crown must be found in a statute, or in an Order in Council; there was, in this case, no Order in Council; none of the relevant statutes provided the necessary authority for the
Ministers to enter into this kind of so-called contract.
This legal submission, a number of years later, that there was never any binding contractual rela tionship is, in view of all that has gone on pursuant to the March 26 letter, somewhat startling. It might well be almost an affront to the ordinary citizens of this country that these Ministers could not bind the government. If the submission is correct, the whole exercise from 1968 to the final breakdown between the parties, becomes a public travesty.
The evidence before me showed that senior civil servants involved in this matter over the years, many ministers, and others treated the arrange ment as a binding commitment. As examples, I refer to the evidence of W. W. Reid and Arthur Bailey. Reid, a senior civil servant, was closely involved with the problem from the outset to the end. He, from time to time, suggested certain programmes to try and meet the commitment. Bailey was produced as an officer of the Crown for examination for discovery. He was, at that time, an Assistant Deputy Minister, Corporate Manage ment, Department of Supply and Services. In respect of the negotiations leading to the letter of March 26, he said both sides had interests and motivations, "both of them coming together to a point of decision". Further:
... obviously the government and the three ministers concerned felt that it was in their particular interest to enter a negotiation and come out with an agreement because they felt they were going to get something out of it. [Q. 967: My underlining.]
But the point of no binding agreement has been taken. I must deal with it.
The defendant relied on The Queen v. Transworld Shipping Ltd.' as authority for the proposition that ministerial authority to enter into a contract on behalf of the Crown must be found in a statute or Order in Council. Jackett C.J. said at pages 163-164:
Before considering the questions that were so raised in this case, it is worthwhile, in my view, to review, in a general way, certain considerations that must be kept in mind when a question arises as to whether there is a contract between the Government of Canada and some other person in a field falling
' [1976] 1 F.C. 159 [C.A.].
within the domain of the Department of Transport. The points that I have in mind are
(a) departmental authority,
(b) parliamentary control,
(c) the Government Contracts Regulations, and
(d) section 15 of the Department of Transport Act.
With regard to departmental authority in respect of contract ing, just as when any person contracts as agent of an ordinary person, so, when some person contracts on behalf of Her Majesty, there must be authority for the agent to act on behalf of the principal; and, in the case of a government under our system of responsible government, such authority must ordinar ily be found in or under a statute or an order in council. In this connection, it is to be noted that ordinary government opera tions in Canada are divided among statutorily created depart ments each of which is presided over by a Minister of the Crown who has, by statute, the "management" and direction of his department. In my view, subject to such statutory restric tions as may be otherwise imposed, this confers on such a Minister statutory authority to enter into contracts of a current nature in connection with that part of the Federal Govern ment's business that is assigned to his department. In the case of the Department of Transport the relevant provision is section 3 of the Department of Transport Act, which reads as follows:
3. (1) There shall be a department of the Government of Canada called the Department of Transport over which the Minister of Transport appointed by commission under the Great Seal shall preside.
(2) The Minister has the management and direction of the Department and holds office during pleasure.
Once it appears that the Minister has prima facie statutory authority to enter into contracts within his department's domain, it follows, in my view, subject to any inconsistent statutory provision, that his power can, and will, in the ordinary course of events, be exercised by the officers of his department. [My underlining.]
A similar statement to that made by Jackett C.J. had been made by Thurlow J. (now C.J.) in Walsh Advertising Company Limited v. The Queen. 2 The proposition came, for consideration, before the Supreme Court of Canada in J. E. Verreault & Fils Ltée v. Attorney General of the Province of Quebec. 3 In that case, an Order in Council, signed by the Lieutenant Governor of Quebec, authorized the Minister of Social Welfare to sign a contract for the purchase of a piece of land. It was contemplated the land would be used for the erection of a home for the aged. The Minister then signed a contract with the appellant
2 [1962] Ex.C.R. 115.
3 [1977] 1 S.C.R. 41. There is some discussion by Davison C.J., of actual and ostensible authority of Crown officers, in Meates v. Attorney-General, [1979] 1 NZLR 415 [S.C.]. The facts in that case were quite different from the facts in this case and the Verreault case.
for the construction of the home. On a change of government, the Province purported to cancel the construction contract. It was argued no enforce able contract had been entered into because the Order in Council had authorized only the purchase of land, not the construction contract. Pigeon J., giving the judgment of the Court, held the con tract had been validly made pursuant to legislation creating a Department of Social Welfare (1958-59 (Que.), c. 27). Section 8 of that statute provided no contract or document should be binding on the department unless signed by the Minister or his Deputy. Section 10 provided the Lieutenant Gov ernor in Council could authorize the Minister to organize schools and other institutions adminis tered by his department; and could authorize him to:
... acquire, by agreement or expropriation, lands or immove- ables necessary for such purposes.
At pages 45-49, Pigeon J. said:
Can it be concluded from these provisions that, under the laws in force on June 7, 1960, the Minister of Social Welfare could not award a contract for a building intended for use as a home for the aged without an authorization from the Lieuten ant Governor in Council? I think not. Firstly, it must be borne in mind that s. 10 is not in restrictive form. Like c. 6, it is an enabling statute. It may have a restrictive effect only to the extent that, under general principles, a legislative authorization is required. Such is the case for expropriation: the right to expropriate is exceptional, and it accordingly exists only by virtue of an express provision.
With regard to the organization of social welfare institutions, the situation is different because an affirmative enactment of limited application does not, as a rule, have the effect of excluding the application of a general principle.
It is therefore necessary to consider whether, in the absence of any statutory restriction, a minister is capable of contracting in the name of the government. Counsel for the respondent quoted the following passage from Mr. René Dussault's recent book, Traité de Droit administratif canadien et québécois (p. 888):
[TRANSLATION] ... an agent who seeks to enter into a contract on behalf of the government must be specifically empowered to do so: the law which is the source of the government's powers also establishes the boundaries beyond which it may not venture. As was pointed out by Thurlow J., in the Exchequer Court of Canada (Walsh Advertising Co. Ltd. v. R. [1962] Ex. C.R. 115, 123-124):
It appears to be established as a general proposition that a minister of the Crown has no authority, to enter into contracts on behalf of the Crown unless he has been authorized by a statute or by order in council to do so.
With respect, I feel that the correct principle is stated in the following passages from Griffith and Street, Principles of Administrative Law (3rd ed., 1963, pp. 269-271):
The United States is not liable on a contract made by its agent unless he has express statutory authority to make it or there is an appropriation adequate to its fulfilment. In Eng- land, on the other hand, the ordinary principles of agency apply to public officers. They are not required to have express authority in order to bind their principals, and they are not themselves liable on contracts unless they have contracted personally.
... It is usually stated that Crown contracts are invalid if Parliament has not made an express appropriation for the purposes of the contract. This is a misreading of the authori ties, as an Australian decision has recognised. It rests chiefly on an obiter dictum of one judge in Churchward v. Reg., (1865, 1 Q.B. 173, p. 209 per Shee J.), which has been considerably modified by several decisions in this century in which Viscount Haldane played a prominent part. It is submitted that the law is as follows: a contract made by an agent of the Crown acting within the scope of his ostensible authority is a valid contract by the Crown; in the absence of a Parliamentary appropriation either expressly or impliedly referable to the contract, it is unenforceable.
Her Majesty is clearly a physical person, and I know of no principle on the basis of which the general rules of mandate, including those of apparent mandate, would not be applicable to her. In this respect the position of ministers and other officers of the government is fundamentally different from that of municipal employees. In our system municipalities are the creatures of statute, and the ultra vires doctrine must accord ingly be applied in its full rigor.
Turning again to the Walsh Advertising case, it must be noted that the judgment was rendered after the coming into force of the Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 116. In this kind of code on the subject of government contracts, restrictive provisions were to be found which had to be applied, without it being really necessary to have resort to general principles. As counsel for the appellant pointed out at the hearing of the instant case, it was not until 1961 that the Quebec Legislature enacted similar provisions (1960-61 (Que.), c. 38).
As I read the Verreault decision, the Supreme Court had indicated the proposition that Crown contracts can only be valid when authorized by Order in Council, or by a statute, is too restrictive.
Counsel for the defendant sought to explain the language used in the Verreault case, as saying, in reality, no more than what the Transworld and earlier cases had said.
I cannot subscribe to that analysis.
The Supreme Court found, in my opinion, apparent or ostensible authority in the relevant Quebec legislation. Neither a specific Order in Council, nor a specific statute, nor a specific statu tory provision was required. The authority was there by implication.
Counsel then went to the particular statutes setting up the departments managed and directed by the three Ministers who signed the March 26 letter. The contention was that in none of those statutes was there authority to enter into a con tract to provide man-hours of work over a future period of time.
That interpretation of the statutes is, to my mind, far too narrow.
Section 15 of the Defence Production Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 62, as amended, empowered the Minister to, among other things:
15. ...
(b) manufacture or otherwise produce, finish, assemble, pro cess, develop, repair, maintain or service defence sup plies or manage and operate facilities therefor;
(d) arrange for the performance of professional or commer cial services;
(g) do all such things as appear to the Minister to be incidental to or necessary or expedient to the matters mentioned in the foregoing provisions of this section or as may be authorized by the Governor in Council with respect to the procurement, construction or disposal of defence supplies or defence projects.
Section 17 of the legislation authorized the Minis ter to enter into contracts for the carrying out of anything he was authorized to do under sections 14 or 15.
When the relevant sections of the Defence Pro duction Act are read liberally and reasonably, I conclude the Minister was authorized to enter into a contract providing for the matters set out in paragraph 15(b), including a commitment of so many hours of work. What the Minister did, in the March 26 letter, was to agree to provide work in respect of "defence supplies", including aircraft and aircraft facilities. Instead of specifying precise work projects, a general commitment of work, in
terms of hours, was given. On a generous reading of paragraph 15(b), authority for the March 26 letter can, in my opinion, be found.
My conclusions on this point, cover not only the guarantee of 40,000 to 50,000 direct labour man- hours as "set-aside" repair and overhaul work from DDP, but any additional work available from that Department contributing to the target level of 700,000 hours.
I have not overlooked paragraph 17(1)(d) which provides that any contract shall not be entered into without the approval of the Governor in Council. The Verreault case is applicable. There was here, as I see it, implied or ostensible approval. A formal Order in Council was not required.
I turn now to the Department of Transport Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 79, as amended. The statute did not deal with aircraft. The powers of the Minister came from the Aeronautics Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 2, as amended. Subsection 3(2) of the Department of Transport Act, gave the management and direc tion of the Department to the Minister. Paragraph 3(d) of the Aeronautics Act imposed the duty on the Minister:
3. ...
(d) to control and manage all aircraft and equipment neces
sary for the conduct of any of Her Majesty's services;
Counsel for the defendant conceded there was statutory authority in those provisions for the Min ister to contract for the repair and overhaul of Department of Transport aircraft and equipment. But he again put the restrictive submission: that authority did not include entering into a contract to provide so many man-hours of work to a third party. Again, as with the submission in respect of the Defence Production Act, the distinction is, as I see it, too fine. If the Minister could contract for the repair and overhaul of Transport aircraft, I fail to see why he could not agree to provide a certain amount of man-hours of work. The work would obviously arise in respect of aircraft owned by the Department, or other aircraft within the Minister's direction or control.
Lastly, there is the Department of Trade and Commerce Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 78. By section 3, the Minister had the management and direction of the Department. Section 5 provided:
5. The duties and powers of the Minister of Trade and Commerce extend to the execution of laws enacted by the Parliament of Canada, and of orders of the Governor in Council, relating to such matters connected with trade and commerce generally as are not by law assigned to any other department of the Government of Canada, as well as to the direction of all public bodies, officers and servants employed in the execution of such laws and orders.
The defendant submitted authorization for the March 26 letter could not be found in these statu tory provisions.
I do not agree.
The arrangements in the Ministers' letter are, in my view, quite capable of falling within the broad head of trade and commerce. That Department had no aircraft of its own. It had an aerospace branch. The Department had wide powers which conceivably might result in the directing of air craft work, and therefore man-hours of labour, to the plaintiffs.
The defendant, on the basis of there being no actual or implied authority to be found in the three statutes discussed, contended that the only way in which the March 26 document could validly have sprung was (a) from a specific Order in Council or (b) from a special statute authorizing that particu lar contract. The submission went even further: there was no statute of any kind in existence in 1969, on which an Order in Council could have been based.
For all of the reasons I have given, I reject the defendant's submissions. The letter, if otherwise meeting the requirements of the law of contract, created a valid enforceable agreement between CAE and the defendant.
The defendant then says:
... the agreement which allegedly came into existence as a result of the letter was not an agreement in the contractual sense, but merely an expression of an intention to enter into contractual relations in the future ("contractual uncertainty");
A number of cases, several well-known, were cited in support of the proposition that an agreement, in which some critical part, or parts, are left undeter-
mined, is no contract at all: parties cannot validly agree they will, in the future, agree upon a vital matter, or matters, that have not yet been determined.
Wilson C.J.S.C. [British Columbia], in Dia mond Developments Ltd. v. Crown Assets Dispos al Corp., 4 set out the law as stated in the leading authorities:
I want first to cite a rule stated by Lord Dunedin in May & Butcher, Ltd. v. The King, [1934] 2 K.B. 17, approved by Lord Wright in G. Scammell & Nephew, Ltd. v. Ouston, [1941] A.C. 251 at p. 269:
To be a good contract there must be a concluded bargain and a concluded contract is one which settles everything that is necessary to be settled and leaves nothing to be settled by agreement between the parties. Of course it may leave something which has still to be determined but then that determination must be a determination which does not depend upon the agreement between the parties.
The proposition to be considered is neatly stated by Parker, J., in Von Hatzfeldt-Wildenburg v. Alexander, [1921] 1 Ch. 284, cited and approved by Judson, J., in Calvan Consolidated Oil & Gas Co. Ltd. v. Manning (1959), 17 D.L.R. (2d) 1 at p. 6, [1959] S.C.R. 253, and again by Bull, J.A., in Block Bros. Realty Ltd. v. Occidental Hotel Ltd. (1971), 19 D.L.R. (3d) 194 at p. 198, [1971] 3 W.W.R. 51:
It appears to be well settled by the authorities that if the documents or letters relied on as constituting a contract contemplate the execution of a further contract between the parties, it is a question of construction whether the execution of the further contract is a condition or term of the bargain, or whether it is a mere expression of the desire of the parties as to the manner in which the transaction already agreed to will in fact go through. In the former case there is no enforceable contract either because the condition is unful filled or because the law does not recognise a contract to enter into a contract. In the latter case there is a binding contract and the reference to the more formal document may be ignored.
The defendant contends the providing of man- hours of work could only be done by way of future contracts in respect of specific aircraft. Those contracts, the submission runs, would have to be negotiated as to price; decisions would have to be reached as to whether the plaintiffs had the capa bility of carrying out the work; potential work programmes were unknown in 1969; they would
4 (1972), 28 D.L.R. (3d) 207 [B.C.S.C.], at p. 212. See also Canada Square Corp. Ltd. v. Versafood Services Ltd. et al. (1982), 130 D.L.R. (3d) 205 [Ont. C.A.].
have to be determined in the future. All those things, it is said, make the March 26 letter no contract at all, or put another way, unenforceable.
Once more, I do not agree.
The agreement by the defendant was to provide a guaranteed number of man-hours from DDP and to use its (the Crown's) best efforts to make up any shortfall between what was realized by the plaintiffs from that and other sources, up to 700,000 hours per annum. I have summarized the agreement in broad terms. From a strict legal view, no further matters had to be agreed upon. Best efforts, from the defendant's side to provide the necessary hours, were required. How those best efforts were to be made, when and if necessary, was up to the defendant. As a matter of commer cial and practical necessity, consultation and negotiation as to the work, and cost of it, which would go to any 700,000-hour shortfall, would likely have taken place. In fact, that is what happened. But as a matter of binding legal necessi ty, no further agreements, to make the March 26 letter valid, were required.
The letter falls, to my mind, within the words quoted above from May & Butcher, Ltd. v. The King, [[1934] 2 K.B. 17 (H.L.)]. It was a conclud ed bargain. It left nothing to be settled by future agreement. What was left to be determined, was by the defendant alone: how to carry out the obligations it had undertaken. That determination was not dependant upon the March agreement.
Next, the defendant raises technical arguments. Who, on the plaintiffs' side, was the contracting party? From there the submission proceeds to the hoary law in respect of assignments, legal and equitable, of contractual rights, the right to sue, and the necessary parties.
This submission is based on the premise that the Ministers' letter agreement was made with North west, not CAE, and not Aircraft.
The initial approach by Rayner, the Director of the Aerospace Branch of the Department of Indus try, had been to Bunnell of Northwest. But CAE, through Reekie, became immediately involved. It is true that it was originally contemplated North-
west would be the vehicle to take over the Air Canada Winnipeg base. The proposal to Air Canada came from Northwest. The April 2, 1969 agreement was with Northwest. That agreement had this clause:
Until such time as this Agreement has been superseded in whole or in part by other agreements of a more formal and specific nature, this Agreement shall generally express the nature and extent of the overall program and the spirit and intent with which both parties shall enter into related agree ments. (Ex. P. 18: p. 1).
I accept, however, Reekie's evidence to the effect that those on the government side knew, before March 26, 1969, it might be some CAE subsidiary other than Northwest which might be used.
But the key document, the March 26 letter, is directed to CAE. In my view, CAE and Northwest became parties to the contract set out in the letter. The other party was the defendant.
The formal agreements, made to carry out the whole transaction, were, as recounted, all dated September 1, 1969. They were with Aircraft. CAE was a guarantor in two of them. Two days later, again as earlier set out in these reasons, Northwest assigned all its interest in the Air Canada agree ments to Aircraft. CAE was a party to that transaction.
Reekie's letter of February 28, 1969, to Hewson was really the basis for the Ministers' letter of March 26. In Reekie's letter, paragraph 7 proposed:
The government would agree to assign existing land leases to Northwest Industries as per our proposal to Air Canada.
The Ministers' letter in reply, as to this, stated that the existing lease from Transport to Air Canada would be assigned to Northwest for 10 years at the then existing financial terms. On September 18, 1969, the defendant leased certain airport land, not to Northwest, but to Aircraft. While the evi dence is not too clear, this lease seems to be in compliance with the leasing arrangement. It sup ports the view that the parties were dealing with CAE and Aircraft. Northwest was out of the picture.
There is no doubt in my mind that there was, at the least, an equitable assignment from Northwest to Aircraft of any rights Northwest had under the March 26 contract. And there is equally no doubt all concerned knew that Aircraft was going to carry on the operation of the Winnipeg base.
The defendant's position is that Northwest must be a party plaintiff in the action; there was no legal assignment in writing, even if there were an equitable assignment, that does not do away with the necessity of Northwest being a party. Refer ence was made to certain statements in the 9th edition of Cheshire and Fifoot's Law of Contract.
I prefer, and adopt, the view expressed in Chitty on Contracts (24th ed., Vol. 1) paragraph 1169:
1169 Enforcement of legal chose in action equitably assigned. Before the Judicature Act 1873, an assignment of a legal chose in action could not usually have been enforced except in the name of the assignor because a legal chose in action had to be enforced in the common law courts, which would only recognise the assignor as entitled to sue. After the passing of the Judicature Act, it was held that, although assignments of legal choses not complying with the statute remained valid in equity, it also remained the position that both assignor and assignee must be made parties to the proceedings. Where the assignment fails to be statutory because the assignor has not wholly disposed of his interest (e.g. where it is by way of charge only, or is of part of a debt only), this rule generally serves a useful purpose since it ensures that all parties with an interest in the chose are brought before the court. But where the assignor retains no interest in the chose in action and the assignment only fails to be statutory, e.g. because it was not in writing, the requirement that the assignor be made a party to the pro ceedings seems no longer to serve any such purpose, if the view stated above as to the effect of equitable assignments is accepted.
However, it is to be noted that the debtor may waive the requirement that the assignor be joined, and in any event the Rules of the Supreme Court now provide that no cause of action is to be defeated for nonjoinder of a party, though the court may direct that he be made a party to the case.
The addition of Northwest as a party plaintiff would not, in my view, serve any useful purpose. Further, the Rules of this Court [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] provide:
Rule 1716. (1) No action shall be defeated by reason of the misjoinder or nonjoinder of any party; and the Court may in any action determine the issues or questions in dispute so far as
they affect the rights and interests of the persons who are parties to the action.
I shall, therefore, determine the issues in dispute so far as they affect the rights and interests of the present parties.
I turn now to the second main issue: what were the terms of the agreement?
They are to be found in the March 26 letter. I shall summarize:
(1) The parties agreed that 700,000 man-hours per annum of direct labour was a realistic target for an effective operation, and one which would maintain 1969 employment levels.
(2) DDP guaranteed 40,000 to 50,000 direct labour man-hours in the years 1971 through 1976 as "set aside" repair and overhaul work. I add these comments. This was a guarantee with no strings attached. If DDP, in order to carry out its obligation, had to take work away from others, that was its concern; there was no stipu lation, in the March agreement, to the contrary.
(3) The Government of Canada (in this case the defendant) agreed to employ its best efforts to secure additional work from other departments and Crown corporations in respect of any short fall up to 700,000 hours per year for the years 1971 to 1976.
It is not necessary to summarize paragraphs (d) and (e) of the Ministers' letter.
Before going to the issue as to breach of con tract, I shall deal with the key obligation "will employ its best efforts".
An equivalent term, "use their best endeavours", was interpreted by A. T. Lawrence J., sitting on the Railway and Canal Commission, in Sheffield District Railway Company v. Great Central Railway Company':
5 (1911), 27 T.L.R. 451 [Rail. and Canal Corn.] at p. 452. See also: Terrell v. Mabie Todd & Coy Ld. (1952), 69 R.P.C. 234 [Q.B.D.] at p. 237; Randall v. Peerless Motor Car Co., 99 N.E. 221 (1912) [S.C. Mass.] at p. 226 ("best energies"); In Re Heard (1980), 6 B.R. 876 at pp. 883-884 ("best effort").
The respondents sought to rely upon cases decided in this Court upon other words used under different circumstances. We think that nothing is more misleading than this use of precedent. We think "best endeavours" means what the words say; they do not mean second-best endeavours. We quite agree with the argument of Mr. Balfour Browne that they cannot be construed to mean that the Great Central must give half or any specific proportion of its trade to the Sheffield District. They do not mean that the Great Central must so conduct its business as to offend its traders and drive them to competing routes. They do not mean that the limits of reason must be overstepped with regard to the cost of the service; but short of these qualifications the words mean that the Great Central Company must, broadly speaking, leave no stone unturned to develop traffic on the Sheffield District line.
The next main issue is: did the defendant breach the agreement? Put in terms of the Sheffield case: did the defendant use less than "best efforts" (second-best efforts), or did it léave reasonable stones unturned, in endeavouring to provide to the plaintiffs any shortfalls up to 700,000 direct man- hours per year.
The evidence clearly establishes two things: the DDP guarantee of 40,000-50,000 direct hours was met only in the 1972-1973 year. The best efforts undertaking did not come into play in the 1971-1972 year. Aircraft reached the 700,000 hour target from other sources. But there was a shortfall in the remaining four years.
I have concluded the defendant did not, as outlined in the previous paragraph, provide the agreed DDP work in four of the five years in question. In respect of the 700,000 hours commit ment, I have also concluded the defendant did not, through the Government of Canada, use its best efforts to make up any shortfall up to 700,000 hours.
[Editor's note: The Editor has made a determina tion that substantial portions of the reasons for judgment herein should not be published in view of the amount of space they would occupy in the Reports and the fact that they add nothing to the precedential value of this case. The portions of the judgment omitted are those which consist in a
review of the evidence supporting the conclusion that the Government did not use its best efforts to make up the shortfall of work at the Winnipeg facility and the calculation of damages. The awards of damages totalled $4,300,000.]
In the statement of issues agreed to by the parties, an alternative was stated. It was dependent on a finding there was no valid and enforceable agreement between CAE and the defendant. If so, then the plaintiffs based their cause of action on "negligent misrepresentations" by the defendant. In view of my finding there was a valid and enforceable agreement, and breach of it, it is not necessary to deal with that issue of "negligent misrepresentations".
The plaintiffs are entitled to the costs of this action.
I direct counsel for the plaintiffs to prepare the formal pronouncement; then to submit it to coun sel for the defendant for approval. But if agree ment as to its form cannot be reached, I will settle the formal pronouncement.
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