A-515-85
The Queen (Appellant) (Defendant)
v.
Bertram S. Miller Ltd. (Respondent) (Plaintiff)
INDEXED AS: BERTRAM S. MILLER LTD. V. R. (F.C.A.)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Ryan and Hugessen JJ.-
Fredericton, January 8, 9; Ottawa, June 19, 1986.
Constitutional law - Charter of Rights - Criminal process
- Search or seizure - Infested trees - Confiscation and
destruction of imported trees, without warrant, under Plant
Quarantine Act - Seizure not unreasonable within meaning of
s. 8 Charter - Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B,
Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), ss. 7, 8, 15, 24(1)
Plant Quarantine Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-13, ss. 3(2), 4(h),
6(1)(a), 9(4),(5)(b) - Plant Quarantine Regulations, SOR/76-
763 (consolidated in C.R.C., c. 1273), ss. 4, 5(1), 7 (as am. by
SOR/80-246), 16, 22 - Canadian Bill of Rights, R.S.C. 1970,
Appendix III, ss. 1(a),(b), 2(e) - Interpretation Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. I-23, s. 26(7) - Combines Investigation Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. C-23, s. 10(1),(3).
Agriculture - Imported trees infested by insect larvae
Confiscation and destruction of trees, without warrant, under
Plant Quarantine Act - Public interest in destruction of trees
outweighing interest protected by Charter s. 8 - Whether
right to compensation exists - Plant Quarantine Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. P-13, ss. 3(2), 4(h), 6(1)(a), 9(4),(5)(b) - Plant
Quarantine Regulations, SOR/76-763 (consolidated in C.R.C.,
c. 1273), ss. 4, 5(1), 7 (as am. by SOR/80-246), 16, 22 -
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the
Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c.
11 (U.K.), ss. 7, 8, 15, 24(1).
Construction of statutes - Plant Quarantine Act - Confis
cation and destruction of infested trees under Act - Whether
presumption Parliament not intending to deprive citizen of
lawfully held property without compensation applicable so as
to entitle respondent to compensation - Plant Quarantine Act,
R.S.C. 1970, c. P-13, ss. 3(2), 4(h), 6(1)(a), 9(4),(5)(b) - Plant
Quarantine Regulations, SOR/76-763 (consolidated in C.R.C.,
c. 1273), ss. 4, 5(1), 7 (as am. by SOR/80-246), 16, 22
Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, RR. 408(1), 412(1)
Freshwater Fish Marketing Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. F-13
Narcotic Control Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, s. 3(1).
The respondent imported three lots of ornamental trees and
shrubs from three different nurseries in the United States.
Upon inspecting the stock at the respondent's own premises, as
agreed and without a warrant-it is not required by the Plant
Quarantine Act-, inspectors of the Federal Department of
Agriculture found some of the trees to be infested with what
was later identified as gypsy moth larvae. The inspectors
formed the opinion that there was a reasonable danger that the
whole shipment was or could shortly become infested. They
therefore confiscated the trees and ordered the respondent to
destroy them. The inspectors themselves destroyed the trees
when the order was not obeyed.
The Trial Judge [[1985] 1 F.C. 72] found that the respond
ent had been the victim of an unreasonable search and seizure,
contrary to section 8 of the Charter, and awarded it compensa
tion for its damages. Paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Act was
declared inoperative to the extent of its inconsistency with
section 8 of the Charter. This is an appeal from that decision.
Held (Heald J. dissenting), the appeal should be allowed.
Per Ryan J.: The evidence was sufficient to establish that the
larvae identified as gypsy moths came from a particular lot of
trees from a particular source.
The inspection was not carried out pursuant to paragraph
6(1)(a) of the Act but pursuant to section 7 of the Regulations.
There was nothing unreasonable about the "search" or inspec
tion. The importer had consented to it and the inspection was
routine and purely administrative in nature.
The real issue is whether the confiscation and destruction of
the trees and shrubs under subsection 9(4) of the Act was
unreasonable within the meaning of section 8 of the Charter.
Subsection 9(4) confers authority to order the destruction of
infested plants by the person from whom it is confiscated, and
that authority is wide enough to authorize the actual destruc
tion of the plants by departmental officials where the owner has
failed to execute the order issued under subsection 9(4). Sec
tion 22 of the Regulations confers a power supplemental to
subsection 9(4) of the Act with respect to the destruction and
disposition of confiscated plants. The destruction called for the
exercise of ministerial authority under section 22, and its
delegation was in compliance with that section.
The confiscation and destruction of the trees and shrubs
constituted a seizure within the meaning of section 8 of the
Charter and that seizure was not unreasonable; it was merely a
step in an administrative process and had nothing to do with
criminal law. It would be undesirable to introduce a relatively
inflexible warrant requirement into our administrative law
system. In this case, there was a powerful public interest in
safeguarding New Brunswick forests against what might well
have been a very damaging infestation.
While privacy is the most important interest safeguarded by
section 8, the interest a person has in being secure against
unreasonable seizure of his property is also safeguarded. How
ever, in this case, there was an "emergency situation", and thus
neither a warrant nor other authorization from an impartial
arbiter was a necessary precondition. Furthermore, the stand
ard provided by subsection 9(4) is a reasonable standard: there
must be a reasonable belief that the plants are hazardous.
The absence of compensation is not enough to brand the
seizure of the importer's goods as unreasonable.
The inspectors believed that there was danger of the infesta
tion spreading and they had reasonable grounds for their belief.
In deciding that the entire shipment should be destroyed, even
if only one lot was found to be infested, the inspectors may have
erred on the side of caution. But the consequences of an
"invasion" were so serious that they were entitled to do so.
The importer cannot invoke paragraphs 1(a) and (b) of the
Bill of Rights because it is a corporation. And in view of the
emergency situation, the duty to act fairly imposed by para
graph 2(e) did not extend to a duty to grant a hearing. Section
7 of the Charter is not applicable since it provides no protection
against deprivation of security of property. Nor can section 15
of the Charter be relied upon, as it was not in force at the
material time herein.
The presumption that Parliament does not intend to deprive
the citizen of his lawfully held property without compensation
does not apply in this case. The terms of the statute herein are
inconsistent with a general statutory right to compensation
existing apart from the Minister's right, in provisions 3(2) and
4(h) of the Act, to order compensation in some destruction
cases.
The Trial Judge also erred in awarding damages because
when the goods were destroyed, they had little or no market
value, being infected with gypsy moth larvae.
Per Hugessen J.: The Trial Judge's findings of fact are not to
be interfered with. The issue herein is solely one of law: are the
relevant provisions of the Act and Regulations contrary to the
Charter? Since there was agreement between the respondent
and the inspectors that the shipment would be inspected at the
respondent's premises, the Trial Judge's finding that the
"search and seizure" powers in paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Act
was incompatible with section 8 of the Charter was irrelevant.
The question remains whether the confiscation and destruc
tion provisions of subsection 9(4) of the Act are contrary to
section 8 of the Charter. Subsection 9(4) is not inoperative as
permitting an unreasonable seizure. According to common law,
the inspectors' action was not illegal since they acted on
reasonable belief, as required by subsection 9(4). With respect
to the Charter, the test of what is "unreasonable" for the
purposes of section 8 of the Charter will vary from case to case.
However, there is clearly a category of public health- and
safety-related inspections carried out in commercial or industri
al premises where a warrantless search and seizure, such as one
made pursuant to subsection 9(4), is not only reasonable but
essential for the protection of the public good.
The purpose of the Plant Quarantine Act is the protection of
forests and farms from infestation with parasites. Normally,
the inspected premises will be out-of-doors or open to the
public. There can be no reasonable expectation of privacy in the
things searched: plant material or parasites. The search must be
conducted at a reasonable time and be based upon reasonable
belief. Once plant material is found to be infested and to
constitute a hazard, the public interest in its seizure and
destruction outweighs any interest whose protection is
envisaged by the Charter.
The presumption of a right to compensation does not apply in
this case. Firstly, because the facts to support a claim for
compensation based on that principle were not pleaded.
Secondly, even if the claim had been properly pleaded, because
the property seized in this case was not lawfully possessed, not
having passed inspection under the Act. The deprivation of
such unlawful possession can create no presumption of an
intent to compensate.
Per Heald J. (dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
It is unecessary and undesirable to consider the applicability
of section 8 of the Charter, or section 7 thereof, or paragraphs
1(a) and 2(e) of the Bill of Rights. The respondent is entitled to
compensation based on the Supreme Court of Canada decision
in Manitoba Fisheries, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 101.
The goods destroyed were not valueless, nor were they a
menace, nor were they illegally held at the time of taking.
According to the evidence—larvae were found on only 15 trees,
all in the same lot—there could not have been any shadow of
suspicion with respect to over half of the shipment. Nor was
there any evidence that the wind could have carried the larvae
to the other trees. Nor was there conclusive evidence that the
gypsy moth larvae examined came from those trees. The ship
ment therefore had a real and substantial value, it did not
represent a menace and it was lawfully held by the respondent.
With respect to the scheme of the Act and the Regulations,
reference was made to the principle enunciated by Lord Atkin-
son in Central Control Board (Liquor Traffic) v. Cannon
Brewery Co., [1919] A.C. 744 (H.L.). It is not a question of
implying a general right to compensation: the legal right to
compensation exists unless a clear and unequivocal contrary
intention is expressed in the relevant legislation. There is no
such clear and unequivocal contrary intention in the Plant
Quarantine Act or Regulations.
There is no basis to disturb the findings of the Trial Judge
with respect to the value of the shipment.
It is true that the Manitoba Fisheries principle was not
specifically pleaded, but all the essential facts relating to its
applicability have been pleaded, and that is all that is neces
sary. Furthermore, counsel for the appellant addressed the
question of compensation both at trial and on the appeal. The
pleadings are therefore not defective.
The respondent is only entitled to compensation for goods
destroyed. Even if there was valid claim for damages under the
Charter or the Bill of Rights, this is not a case for either
general or exemplary damages since the Trial Judge found that
the inspectors carried out their duty in conformity with the Act
and Regulations.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
R. v. Harrison, [1977] 1 S.C.R. 238; R. v. Rao (1984),
12 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (Ont. C.A.); Camara v. Municipal
Court of San Francisco, 387 U.S. 523 (1967); A. M.
Smith & Co., Ltd. v. R., [1982] 1 F.C. 153 (C.A.); B.C.
Medical Assn. v. R. in Right of B.C. (1984), 58 B.C.L.R.
361 (C.A.); Stein et al. v. 'Kathy K" et al. (The Ship),
[1976] 2 S.C.R. 802; Donovan v. Dewey, 452 U.S. 594
(1981); 101 S. Ct. 2534 (1981); Re Belgoma Transpor
tation Ltd. and Director of Employment Standards
(1985), 51 O.R. (2d) 509 (C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Manitoba Fisheries Ltd. v. The Queen, [1979] 1 S.C.R.
101; Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145.
REFERRED TO:
Law Society of Upper Canada v. Skapinker, [1984] 1
S.C.R. 357; Attorney-General v. De Keyser's Royal
Hotel, [1920] A.C. 508 (H.L.); Central Control Board
(Liquor Traffic) v. Cannon Brewery Co., [1919] A.C. 744
(H.L.); R. in right of the Province of British Columbia v.
Tener et al., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 533; Lever Brothers, Ltd. v.
Bell, [1931] 1 K.B. 557 (C.A.); In re Vandervell's Trusts
(No. 2), [1974] Ch. 269 (C.A.); Karas et al. v. Rowlett,
[1944] S.C.R. 1; Dhalla v. Jodrey (1985), 16 D.L.R.
(4th) 732 (N.S.C.A.); Entick v. Carrington (1765), 19
St. Tr. 1029; 2 Wils K.B. 275; 95 E.R. 807 (K.B.); White
v. Redfern (1879), 5 Q.B.D. 15; De Verteuil v. Knaggs,
[1918] A.C. 557 (P.C.).
COUNSEL:
Derek H. Aylen, Q.C. and A. R. Pringle for
appellant (defendant).
Mark M. Yeoman, Q.C. for respondent
(plaintiff).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
appellant (defendant).
Yeoman, Savoie, LeBlanc & Assoc., Monc-
ton, New Brunswick, for respondent (plain-
tiff).
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
HEALD J. (dissenting): This is an appeal from a
judgment of the Trial Division [[1985] 1 F.C. 72]
in which the respondent was awarded damages
against the appellant in the amount of $13,439.02
together with costs. The respondent filed a notice
"of intention to contend that the decision of the
Court below should be varied." The basis of this
notice was the respondent's view that it was en
titled to general damages and exemplary damages
in addition to the special damages awarded by the
learned Trial Judge in the sum of $13,439.02.
The respondent owns and operates a nursery
business in St. Martins, New Brunswick. Some of
its nursery stock is customarily imported from the
United States. The stock in issue in this appeal
consisted of ornamental trees and shrubs pur
chased by the respondent from three different
nurseries in the United States: Bald Hill Nurseries
Inc., Exeter, Rhode Island (Bald Hill); Cherry
Hill Nurseries Inc., West Newbury, Massachu-
setts (Cherry Hill); and, Weston Nurseries, Hop-
kinton, Massachusetts (Weston). The total ship
ment in issue consisted of some 362 plants of
which 175 were purchased from Bald Hill, 96 from
Cherry Hill and 91 from Weston. It contained,
inter alla, the following varieties of ornamental
trees and shrubs; spruce; pine; oak; beech; linden;
maple; juniper; rhododendron; cotoneaster; azalea
and hemlock.
Donald Miller, the Vice-President of the
respondent, and the individual mainly engaged in
the operation of the respondent nursery applied for
and obtained an import permit from Mr. William
Weiler, a Programs Officer of Agriculture
Canada, at the Saint John Office. This permit was
issued on May 13, 1982 and the delivery point for
inspection shown thereon was the respondent's
nursery at St. Martins, approximately 100 miles
distant from St. Stephen, New Brunswick, the
proposed port of entry from the U.S.A. into
Canada. The learned Trial Judge observed [at
page 74] with respect to this procedure of not
carrying out the inspection at the border but
rather, on the premises of the importer, that it was
"customary for such shipments and for the conve
nience of both the importer and the Department".
In this case, it is also clear that the importer
agreed to this procedure which had also been
followed in respect of earlier importations of nur
sery stock. At the time of obtaining the permit,
Mr. Weiler cautioned Donald Miller to beware of
gypsy moths which were causing serious problems
in the New England states. He also gave Mr.
Miller a pamphlet concerning the gypsy moth
which Mr. Miller read prior to going to the U.S.A.
for this shipment.
The nursery stock in issue was brought to the
respondent's nursery at St. Martins in one
enclosed truck during the late evening of May 19,
1982. Inspector Holm of Agriculture Canada trav
elled to the nursery for the purpose of inspecting
the shipment during the afternoon of Thursday,
May 20, 1982. He arrived when the shipment was
being unloaded. At that time Mr. Donald Miller
and several other individuals were examining one
particular tree. They showed Inspector Holm
larvae on that tree. Inspector Holm then inspected
some 15 of the larger hardwood trees (mostly,
sugar maple and oak). He observed some larvae on
most of those 15 trees. On some of the trees
inspected, he observed two or three larvae. On
others he observed six to eight larvae. The leaves
were showing signs of defoliation. Holm also
inspected some softwood trees as well as some
smaller shrubs. He found larvae on some of the
softwood trees but did not find any larvae on the
smaller shrubs. The only portion of the shipment
inspected by Holm was the portion originating
from the Bald Hill nursery. He testified that, to
his knowledge, there were no larvae on the trees
which came from the other two nurseries. He also
said that since he thought the larvae could possibly
be tent caterpillar or gypsy moth and since he was
not positive as to their identity, he decided to
collect samples of the larvae and take them to the
Saint John office for further examination by his
superiors. He also issued a Notice of Detention at
that time with respect to the Bald Hill portion of
the shipment ordering the respondent to spray all
plants from Bald Hill nursery with an insecticide.
Inspector Holm said that he gave those samples to
Mr. Weiler on the morning of Friday, May 21,
1982 to be taken to Fredericton for positive
identification.
Mr. Fred Titus, a technician employed by the
Canadian Forestry Service, testified that he
received certain samples of larvae from Mr.
Weiler in the afternoon of May 21, 1982, the
larvae being from two separate locations. Titus
delivered the larvae to Dr. L. P. Magasi, the Head
of the Forest Insect and Disease Survey for the
Maritimes Forestry Center at Fredericton. Dr.
Magasi examined the larvae under a microscope.
They also were examined by Dr. Douglas G.
Embree, the Program Director of Technical Ser
vices in the Canadian Forestry Services. Dr.
Embree was qualified at the trial as an expert in
insect entomology. The larvae examined by Dr.
Magasi and Dr. Embree were from the two sepa
rate locations referred to supra, (the respondent's
premises and the premises of Maritime Sod Lim
ited [hereinafter called Maritime Sod], a competi
tor nursery of the respondent at Saint John which
also imported nursery stock from the U.S.A. There
is no evidence on this record that Maritime Sod
imported from the same three nurseries as the
respondent). Dr. Magasi was unable to say wheth
er the larvae he examined were from Maritime
Sod or from the respondent's premises. Dr.
Embree testified that he examined two larvae
under a microscope. He positively identified them
as gypsy moth larvae. He could not state whether
the larvae he examined came from the respond
ent's trees or from those of Maritime Sod. Never
theless, Dr. Magasi and Dr. Embree recommended
that "the lots affected" should be burned. A draft
memorandum was prepared and signed by Dr.
Magasi and delivered to Mr. Weiler on Friday,
May 21, 1982 containing, inter alla, the recom
mendation for destruction, by burning. In the
evening of May 21, 1982, Mr. Weiler advised Don
Miller and his father that all three lots of the
respondent's shipment would have to be destroyed
due to gypsy moth infestation. Later that evening,
Notices of Detention and Destruction were issued
and signed by Harvey Holm in respect of all three
lots. The respondent did not destroy the stock in
question. Subsequently, on Tuesday, May 25,
1982, one A. T. Watt, an official of the New
Brunswick Department of Agriculture acting as an
Inspector under the Plant Quarantine Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. P-13 and Regulations [Plant Quarantine
Regulations, SOR/76-763], informed the respond
ent by a hand-delivered letter that all three lots of
nursery stock imported from the U.S.A. must be
burned pursuant to subsection 9(4) of that Act.
The entire stock was destroyed by burning on
Tuesday, May 25, 1982 by servants of the Provin
cial Forestry Department acting as agents and at
the request of the Federal Department of
Agriculture.
It should be noted before concluding this sum
mary of the relevant facts that: the Weston stock
was certified by the appropriate Massachusetts
authority to be "apparently free from injurious
plant pests" on May 17, 1982 and by the United
States Department of Agriculture to be "substan-
tially free from injurious diseases and pests" on
the same date after thorough examination; the
Cherry Hill stock was certified on May 17, 1982
by the appropriate Massachusetts authority to be
"substantially free from injurious diseases and
pests" after thorough examination; and, that the
Bald Hill stock was certified on May 17, 1982 by
the appropriate Rhode Island authority, after thor
ough examination, to be "substantially free from
injurious diseases and pests".
The learned Trial Judge found that the destruc
tion of the respondent's property was unlawful and
that its right to be secure against unreasonable
search or seizure, as guaranteed by section 8 of the
Charter [Canadian Charter of Rights and Free
doms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982,
Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)]
had been denied. Accordingly, applying subsection
24(1) of the Charter,' he awarded the respondent
compensation in the amount of $13,439.02 and
costs. His rationale for reaching this conclusion
reads (at page 83):
In the case at bar, the inspectors did not trespass on their
first visit to the nursery, as they had been impliedly invited as a
result of the agreement between both parties that the inspection
would take place at the nursery. It is my view, however, that in
the interval between the discovery of the larvae and the actual
destruction of the trees an assessment could have been made by
an impartial arbiter as to whether or not to seize and destroy
the goods, had the Act so prescribed.
I cannot conclude from the jurisprudence to date, as applied
to the facts of the case at bar, that the warrantless search
powers conferred by paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Plant Quaran
tine Act are necessarily unreasonable and that they ineluctably
collide with section 8 of the Charter. There may be circum
stances of emergency where the obtention of a warrant would
be unfeasible. In my view, however, paragraph 6(1)(a) is
inoperative to the extent of its inconsistency with section 8,
such as in the present case where it has not been established
that the obtaining of such a warrant was unfeasible or even
impracticable. Subsection 52(1) of the Charter provides for
such situations:
52. (1) The Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of
Canada, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions
of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no
force and effect.
Under the circumstances, I find that the destruction of the
plaintiffs property was unlawful and that his right to be secure
against unreasonable search or seizure, as guaranteed by sec
tion 8 of the Charter, has been denied.
Counsel for the appellant submitted that the
learned Trial Judge erred in finding that there
was, on the facts of this case, a warrantless search
which constituted an unreasonable search and sei
zure by virtue of section 8 of the Charter. In the
view I take of this case, it is unnecessary and
undesirable to consider the applicability of section
8 of the Charter or for that matter, section 7 of the
Charter or paragraphs 1(a) and 2(e) of the
Canadian Bill of Rights [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix
' Subsection 24(1) reads:
24. (1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by
this Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a
court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the
court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances.
III], as submitted by respondent's counsel. 2 Based
on the factual situation summarized supra, I have
concluded that the principles enunciated by the
Supreme Court of Canada in the case of Manitoba
Fisheries Ltd. v. The Queen, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 101
should be applied in this case. In Manitoba Fish
eries (supra), the appellant had been engaged for
many years in the business of purchasing fish from
fishermen at various lakes in Manitoba and proc
essing and selling the fish to customers in the
U.S.A. and other parts of Canada. The appellant
and other companies like it had over the years
built up individual clienteles in what had become a
highly competitive business. Parliament enacted
the Freshwater Fish Marketing Act [R.S.C. 1970,
c. F-13] which came into force on May 1, 1969.
Under that legislation the respondent through its
agent, the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation
was granted a commercial monopoly in the export
of fish from Manitoba and other participating
provinces. As a result the appellant was forced out
of business on or about May 1, 1969. The Supreme
Court of Canada held that the legislation in ques
tion and the Corporation created thereunder had
the effect of depriving the appellant of its goodwill
as a going concern, thereby rendering its physical
assets virtually useless. The Supreme Court held
further that the goodwill so taken away constituted
property of the appellant for the loss of which no
compensation whatever had been paid. At page
118, Mr. Justice Ritchie, in referring to the taking
of this property, said:
There is nothing in the Act providing for the taking of such
property by the Government without compensation and as I
find that there was such a taking, it follows, in my view, that it
was unauthorized ....
In support of this conclusion, Ritchie J. relied on
the long established rule enunciated by Lord
Atkinson in Attorney-General v. De Keyser's
Royal Hotel, [1920] A.C. 508 (H.L.), at page 542
where he said:
The recognized rule for the construction of statutes is that,
unless the words of the statute clearly so demand, a statute is
2 See: Law Society of Upper Canada v. Skapinker, [1984] 1
S.C.R. 357, at p. 383, per Estey J.
not to be construed so as to take away the property of a subject
without compensation.
In this case, the facts establish that the respond
ent was the owner of the shipment of trees and
shrubs in issue. It is clear that the appellant, by
destruction of that shipment through burning took
away the respondent's property rights. It is also
clear that no compensation for the taking was
either offered or paid by the appellant.
Thus, prima facie, the Manitoba Fisheries prin
ciple would seem to apply to the facts of this case.
However, counsel for the appellant has a twofold
response to that view of the matter. Initially, it is
his submission that the appellant's employees and
agents "did not take valuable property but rather
got rid of infested stock that was a menace to
everyone, including the respondent." He further
submits that the Plant Quarantine Act "does not
provide for the taking of valuable property for
public purposes, but rather for the control of some
thing detrimental to all. There is not the same
rationale for compensation as in an expropriation."
Implicit in these submissions and, indeed, implicit
in the Manitoba Fisheries principle is the assump
tion that the property taken was lawfully held by
its owner prior to the taking.
In my view, the validity of these submissions are
dependent upon the fundamental assumption
which they make—namely, that the goods
destroyed were valueless or were a menace or were
illegally held at the time of taking. On my
appreciation of the evidence in this case, I am
unable to make any of these assumptions. The
respondent's shipment had been certified on May
17, 1982 by Federal and State authorities in the
U.S.A. to be substantially or apparently free from
injurious plant pests. The shipment which was
totally destroyed by the appellant contained some
362 trees and shrubs. Larvae were found on only
15 of the respondent's trees. Larvae were also found
on trees imported from the U.S.A. by one of the
respondent's competitors at Saint John. The appel
lant's expert entomologist examined two larvae
under a microscope and identified them as being
gypsy moth larvae. Neither he nor anyone else was
able to say whether the gypsy moth larvae exam-
fined came from the respondent's trees or those
belonging to Maritime Sod at Saint John. Further
more, the respondent's imported nursery stock
came from three separate nurseries in the U.S.A.
There was no evidence of larvae on any of the trees
which came from either the Weston or the Cherry
Hill nurseries. Thus, there could not have been any
shadow of suspicion with respect to over half of the
respondent's shipment. It was suggested that there
was a possibility of the larvae from the Bald Hill
trees being carried by the wind to the other trees.
There was no evidence that this had happened or
was likely to happen. To the contrary, the evidence
was that the larvae on the Bald Hill trees had
progressed to a state in their development where
such a possibility was remote indeed. In my view,
the evidence established a possibility that 15 trees
out of a total of 362 were infested with gypsy moth
larvae. I do not characterize the proof as being any
higher than a possibility in view of the lack of
identification of the gypsy moth larvae as having
come from the respondent's shipment. According
ly, I conclude that the respondent's shipment had
real and substantial value and did not represent a
menace. I also conclude that the said property was
lawfully held by the respondent at the time of its
destruction. The respondent paid to the three U.S.
nurseries the sum of $8,429.19 Canadian for the
shipment in question. Don Miller's uncontradicted
evidence was that the normal mark-up at that time
was approximately 50%. Thus, the evidence estab
lished that the total value of the shipment to the
respondent at the time of destruction was in excess
of $13,000. Don Miller also testified that the
extent of defoliation even on the 15 trees examined
was not serious enough to cause a reduction in the
growth. He said: "There was just no way that I
would have taken that nursery stock and burned
it .... I just don't believe that that was the proper
thing to do." Mr. Miller was not unknowledgeable
in these matters since he had managed the nursery
for some time and had obtained a B.Sc. in Agricul
ture (majoring in Ornamental Horticulture) from
the University of Guelph. In cross-examination, he
was asked whether, if he had seen the defoliation
on the 15 trees, he would still have accepted those
trees. He answered: "I still would have because
there wasn't damage, seriously enough, to cause a
reduction in the growth." He went on to explain
that if the leaf damage on any of the trees amount
ed to more than 50 per cent of the leaves, he would
have rejected those trees. However, he pointed out
that the worst leaf damage he observed amounted
to only about 20% of the leaves on a particular tree
with the exception of one tree (a purple leaf beech)
where approximately 40% of the leaves were
affected.
In view of the evidence as summarized supra, I
am unable to conclude that the appellant did not
take valuable property lawfully held from the
respondent. There is simply no evidence on the
record from which it can be concluded that the
stock destroyed was valueless. To the contrary, the
evidence makes it clear that most, if not all of the
nursery stock destroyed, was not infested or con
taminated in any way. As noted supra, the evi
dence of damaged stock relates only to 15 trees out
of a total stock of 362 trees and shrubs. The letter
to the respondent from the Canadian Forestry
Service Laboratory of Environment Canada,
wherein that service identified the sample of larvae
submitted by the respondent as being gypsy moth
larvae referred only to the Bald Hill stock since
that stock was the source of the sample submitted.
Likewise, there was no evidence from which it
could reasonably be concluded that there was any
likelihood that further infestation or contamina
tion would result. For these reasons, I cannot agree
on this record, that the nursery stock destroyed by
the appellant was not valuable property or was
otherwise harmful. Since, in my view, the evidence
falls far short of establishing that the respondent's
shipment should not have entered Canada due to
gypsy moth infestation, it follows that it does not
establish that the respondent was illegally holding
its property at the time of taking. The inferences
and conclusions which I have drawn from the
uncontradicted evidence herein do not conflict
with any of the findings of fact of the learned Trial
Judge. In this regard, the Trial Judge only found:
(i) that the inspectors carried out their duty as
they were required to do under the Act and Regu
lations; and (ii) that they discussed the matter
with officials of the respondent, and did not agree
with the respondent's proposed solution because
they considered the larvae to be a dangerous pest
requiring immediate destruction. Since the Trial
Judge disposed of the proceedings under the
Charter without any consideration of the Manito-
ba Fisheries principle, it was not necessary for him
to consider whether respondent's property had any
value at the time of its destruction and, conse
quently, he was not called upon to make specific
findings of fact relative to this issue. Similarly, he
was not required, on his view of the matter, to
draw the inferences which, I have drawn and
which, in my opinion, flow necessarily from the
evidence adduced.
The second submission of the appellant concern
ing the applicability of the Manitoba Fisheries
principle relates to the scheme of the Plant Quar
antine Act and the Regulations promulgated there-
under. Appellant's counsel observes that subsec
tion 3(2) of the Act empowers the Minister to
order the payment of compensation in respect of
plants destroyed pursuant to the Regulations. Sub
section 9(4) of the Act, inter alia, authorizes an
inspector to order the destruction of plants when
he believes, on reasonable grounds, that such
plants constitute a hazard because they could be
infested with any pests. Paragraph (5)(b) of sec
tion 9 of the Act empowers the Governor in Coun
cil to make regulations "respecting the destruction
or disposition of any plant or other matter forfeit
ed or confiscated under this section and the pay
ment of any reasonable costs incidental to such
destruction or disposition." Pursuant to subsection
9(5) of the Act, regulations [Plant Quarantine
Regulations] were passed on November 19, 1976
(SOR/76-763 [consolidated in C.R.C., c. 1273]).
Regulation 7(6) provides: "The cost of treating or
destroying any plant or other matter or returning
it to its place of origin pursuant to this section and
all related costs shall be paid by the importer of
the plant or other matter." Counsel also refers to
section 16 of the same Regulations which empow
ers the Minister to award compensation in an
amount not exceeding 80% of the value of plants
destroyed in circumstances where potato plants are
infested with potato cyst nematode or potato wart.
It is, therefore, the submission of counsel based on
the above quoted sections of the Act and Regula
tions, that the statutory scheme contemplates that
in some situations only will compensation be paid
and in others the owner of infested plants may
have to pay for their destruction and will not be
compensated. On this basis he submits that no
right to compensation can be implied from the
provisions of the Plant Quarantine Act and Regu
lations. I am unable to agree with this submission.
I find relevant the judgment of Lord Atkinson in
the case of Central Control Board (Liquor Traffic)
v. Cannon Brewery Co., [1919] A.C. 744 (H.L.).
In that case the Central Control Board (Liquor
Traffic) acquired compulsorily certain licensed
premises pursuant to the powers conferred on them
by the Defence of the Realm (Amendment) (No. 3)
Act, 1915 [5 & 6 Geo. 5, c. 42] and the Defence of
the Realm (Liquor Control) Regulations, 1915.
The House of Lords decided that the owner's
claim to compensation was not limited to compen
sation granted to him as a matter of grace but that
he was entitled to claim compensation as of right
under the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act, 1845
[8 & 9 Viet., c. 18]. At page 752, Lord Atkinson
said:
It was not suggested that the above-mentioned Regulations
were not intra vires; nor was it contended that the principle
recognized as a canon of construction of statutes by many
authorities, such as Attorney-General v. Horner ((1884), 14
Q.B.D. 245, 257), Commissioner of Public Works (Cape
Colony) v. Logan ([1903] A.C. 355, 363), Western Counties
Ry. 'Co. y. Windsor and Annapolis Ry. Co. ((1882), 7 App.
Cas. 178, 188), did not apply to the body of legislation under
which the board purported to act. That canon is this: that an
intention to take away the property of a subject without givin
to him a legal right to compensation for the loss of it is not to
be imputed to the Legislature unless that intention is expressed
in unequivocal terms. I used the words "legal right to compen
sation" advisedly, as I think these authorities establish that, in
the absence of unequivocal language confining the compensa
tion payable to the subject to a sum given ex gratia, it cannot
be so confined. I do not think that the Attorney-General really
contested this, nor, as I understood him, did he contest the
principle that where the statute authorizing the taking away of,
or causing damage to, the subject's property, either does not
provide a special tribunal to assess the amount of the compen
sation the subject is to receive, or only provides a tribunal
which has become non-existent, the subject is entitled to have
that amount assessed in the High Court of Justice: Bentley v.
Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Ry. Co. ([1891] 3 Ch.
222). (Emphasis added).
In that case, it was submitted that the scheme of
the statute and Regulations provided for compul
sory taking without paying compensation therefor
beyond such sum as might by an act of grace be
awarded to the owner. In the case at bar, the
appellant's counsel makes a similar argument. He
suggests that, since the Act and Regulations pro
vide in some cases of destruction, for compensation
and not in others, that no general right to compen
sation is to be implied. That, however, is not the
principle enunciated by Lord Atkinson supra. The
canon of statutory construction to which he
referred makes it clear that "an intention to take
away the property of a subject without giving to
him a legal right to compensation for the loss of it
is not to be imputed to the legislature unless that
intention is expressed in unequivocal terms." It is
not a question of implying a general right to
compensation. The legal right to compensation
exists unless a clear and unequivocal contrary
intention is expressed in the relevant legislation. I
can find no such clear and unequivocal contrary
intention in the Plant Quarantine Act or Regula
tions. Accordingly, and for the above reasons, I
reject the submissions of appellant's counsel as to
the non applicability of the Manitoba Fisheries
decision to the instant case. It follows, in my view,
that the respondent is entitled to compensation for
the value of the goods destroyed. With respect to
the Manitoba Fisheries decision, I would observe
that the Supreme Court of Canada has recently
affirmed the principle of that decision in the case
of R. in right of the Province of British Columbia
v. Tener et al., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 533, at pages 563
and 564, per Estey J. and per Wilson J. at page
551.
Insofar as the value of the goods destroyed is
concerned, I referred earlier to the evidence of
Donald Miller that the cost of the shipment was
$8,429.19 Canadian. He also testified that the
normal mark-up at the relevant time was approxi
mately 50%. On this basis, he quantified the value
of the property destroyed at $13,073.50. This
figure was accepted by the Trial Judge. The appel
lant adduced no evidence to contradict or vary this
figure. Accordingly, I think the Trial Judge was
right to accept the figure given by Mr. Miller and,
in the circumstances, there is no basis to justify
this Court in changing that figure.
A perusal of the transcript of closing argument
by counsel at the trial reveals that both counsel
discussed the Manitoba Fisheries case and made
submissions to the Trial Judge with respect to the
applicability of the rationale of that case to the
instant case. The Trial Judge made no reference in
his reasons to that decision nor did he invoke the
principle established by that case in reaching his
conclusion. In this Court, the Manitoba Fisheries
principle was discussed by each counsel, both in
their memoranda and in oral argument. Although
no question as to the sufficiency of the respon
dent's pleadings was raised in argument by counsel
for the appellant, I wish to comment briefly on this
matter since the basis upon which I have conclud
ed that the respondent is entitled to succeed was
not specifically pleaded. Rule 408(1) [Federal
Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] reads:
Rule 408. (1) Every pleading must contain a precise statement
of the material facts on which the party pleading relies.
Rule 412(1) reads:
Rule 412. (1) A party may by his pleading raise any point of
law.
Accordingly, it seems clear that a pleading must
contain all of the material facts required to sup
port a claim but that conclusions of law do not
have to be pleaded although they may be included.
Thus, the initial question to be asked is whether all
the material facts necessary to the establishment
of a claim under the Manitoba Fisheries principle
have been pleaded in the statement of claim. In my
view, the following facts would have to be pleaded:
(a) property, in the respondent;
(b) a taking of that property;
(c) no compensation for the taking; and
(d) authority for that taking.
A perusal of this statement of claim satisfies me
that all of the above essential facts have been
pleaded. Paragraphs 7 and 8 claim property rights
and allege a taking of those property rights. Para
graph 13, by clear implication, alleges that no
compensation was paid while paragraphs 4 and 9
plead the facts relating to authority for the taking.
For these reasons I conclude that the requisite
allegations have been pleaded sufficiently. How
ever, that may not be the end of the matter in a
case such as this where the respondent has, pursu
ant to Rule 412(1), raised points of law. The
respondent has drawn three conclusions of law in
this statement of claim: trespass (paragraph 8);
breach of the Charter (paragraph 10); and breach
of the Canadian Bill of Rights (paragraph 11). As
noted supra, the respondent's counsel did refer to
the Manitoba Fisheries case in his closing argu
ment at trial. However, a perusal of pages 539-543
of Vol. II of the transcript persuades me that he
was relying on that case in the context of his
submissions on various provisions of the Charter.
In these reasons I have concluded that the
respondent is entitled to compensation on the basis
of the principle established in Manitoba Fisheries
separate and apart from any Charter consider
ations. Therefore, the question arises as to whether
or not the appellant was given the opportunity to
address and did address the Manitoba Fisheries
principle outside of any impact it may have had on
the Charter issues raised by the respondent. This
question is clearly answered by a perusal of the
argument at trial made by counsel for the appel
lant. At Vol. IV, page 580, counsel for the appel
lant said:
It's my submission, My Lord, that the fundamental issue here
in this case, the fundamental issue once we get by the facts in
section 9, and my friend touched on it when he dealt with it.
It's not search and seizure under the Charter of Rights. It's not
Section 1(a) of the Bill of Rights. It's the common law pre
sumption of compensation which my friend talked about ....
Thereafter, at pages 581 to 583, counsel dealt with
the Manitoba Fisheries case, referred to the
scheme of the Act and Regulations and made
substantially the same argument concerning the
non applicability of Manitoba Fisheries as was
presented to us. Therefore, I am satisfied that the
Manitoba Fisheries principle, or "the common law
presumption of compensation" as counsel charac
terized it was addressed by counsel both at the
trial and on the appeal. In these circumstances,
and keeping in mind that under our Rules it is not
mandatory to plead conclusions of law, I have
concluded that the pleadings herein are not defec
tive. Support for this view may be found in the
comments of Scrutton L.J. in the case of Lever
Brothers, Ltd. v. Bell, [1931] 1 K.B. 557 (C.A.),
at pages 582-583 where he said:
In my opinion the practice of the Courts has been to consider
and deal with the legal result of pleaded facts, though the
particular legal result alleged is not stated in the pleadings,
except in cases where to ascertain the validity of the legal result
claimed would require the investigation of new and disputed
facts which have not been investigated at the trial.
This view is further supported by Lord Denning's
judgment in In re Vandervell's Trusts (No. 2),
[1974] Ch. 269 (C.A.), at pages 321-322 where he
said:
It is sufficient for the pleader to state the material facts. He
need not state the legal result. If, for convenience, he does so,
he is not bound by, or limited to, what he has stated. He can
present, in argument, any legal consequence of which the facts
permit.
For all of the above reasons, I have concluded that
the respondent is entitled to receive as compensa
tion for the value of the goods destroyed the sum
of $13,073.50. The Trial Judge gave the respon
dent judgment for the sum of $13,439.02. To the
value of the goods destroyed in the sum of
$13,073.50 he added the following items: costs of
renting a sprayer $108; brokers' fees $165; and
long distance telephone calls $92.52. In my view,
these items can be said to be reasonably incidental
to the value of the respondent's property and,
therefore, I would not disturb the quantum of
compensation awarded by the Trial Judge.
The only other issue to be disposed of is the
matter of the respondent's cross appeal in which it
asks that general damages and exemplary damages
be awarded in addition to the special damages
awarded by the Trial Judge. I would repeat my
conclusion that the respondent is entitled to com
pensation for goods destroyed. In such a situation,
the quantum is determined by a valuation of the
goods destroyed and not by any damages that
might have been suffered. However, assuming
without deciding that the respondent has a valid
claim for damages either under the Charter or the
Bill of Rights, I do not think this is a case for
either general or exemplary damages in view of the
following finding of fact by the Trial Judge (at
pages 75 and 76): "I am fully satisfied that the
inspectors carried out their duty as they were
obligated to do under the Plant Quarantine Act
and Regulations."'
For all of the above reasons I would dismiss the
appeal with costs.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
RYAN J.: This is an appeal from a judgment of
the Trial Division which awarded compensation to
the respondent, Bertram S. Miller Ltd. ("the
importer"), on the ground that the importer had
3 Compare: Karas et al. v. Rowlett, [1944] S.C.R. 1, at p. 10
on the question of general damages.
On the question of exemplary damages see: Dhalla v. Jodrey
(1985), 16 D.L.R. (4th) 732 (N.S.C.A.), at p. 739.
been denied its right guaranteed by section 8 of the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ("the
Charter") to be secure against unreasonable
search and seizure.
The importer had brought into Canada orna
mental trees and shrubs which it had purchased
from three nurseries in the United States, one in
Rhode Island, the other two in Massachusetts.
These trees and shrubs were confiscated and
destroyed by inspectors of the Department of
Agriculture acting under subsection 9(4) of the
Plant Quarantine Act ("the Act"). Subsection
9(4) authorizes an inspector to confiscate plants or
other matter and to order their destruction where
he believes on reasonable grounds that the plants
constitute a hazard because they are or could be
infested with a pest.
The Trial Judge was apparently of the view that
the decision to confiscate and to destroy the trees
and shrubs had been made following a "search"
carried out by inspectors of the Department of
Agriculture pursuant to paragraph 6(1)(a) of the
Act, which reads:
6. (1) An inspector may at any reasonable time
(a) enter any place or premises in which he reasonably
believes there is any pest or plant or other matter to which
this Act applies, and may open any container or package
found therein or examine anything found therein that he has
reason to believe contains any such pest or plant or other
matter, and take samples thereof ....
The inspectors had made the search without
having obtained a warrant. The Trial Judge was of
the view that the powers conferred by paragraph
6(1)(a) to search without warrant are not neces
sarily unreasonable. He stated that there might be
circumstances of emergency in which it would not
be feasible to obtain a warrant. He was of opinion,
however, that the paragraph was inoperative to the
extent of its inconsistency with section 8 of the
Charter. He found that there was inconsistency in
the present case because it had not been estab
lished that obtaining a warrant was not feasible.
The appellant, the Crown, has appealed on the
ground that the Trial Judge erred in finding that
there was a warrantless search which, therefore,
constituted an unreasonable search and seizure
under section 8 of the Charter. This is the essential
issue in this appeal.
Another issue may arise, however, if it should be
determined that the importer's rights under section
8 of the Charter were not denied. The issue is
whether the importer would nonetheless be entitled
to compensation on the basis of the principle in
Manitoba Fisheries Ltd. v. The Queen, [1979] 1
S.C.R. 101, the principle that a person whose
property is taken by the Crown in the exercise of a
statutory power is entitled to compensation unless
the statute clearly indicates a contrary intention.
Mr. Justice Heald has reviewed the facts of the
case in his reasons. I will emphasize only such of
these facts as are necessary to my reasons. I may
occasionally refer to certain facts not mentioned in
his review.
The importer brought the three lots of trees and
shrubs into Canada in one shipment. It has
obtained a permit to import each of the lots. The
permits appear to have been issued under section 4
of the Plant Quarantine Regulations ("the
Regulations").
Subsection 5(1) of the Regulations provides:
5. (1) Subject to the conditions set out in sections 6, 7 and 9
any plant or other matter that is likely to be infested with a pest
may be admitted into Canada if
(a) its admission into Canada is authorized by a permit; and
(b) it is accompanied by a health certificate.
The trees and shrubs were accompanied by appro
priate health certificates.
An "Authority to Release" form was issued for
each of the three lots. The forms indicated that the
shipment would be inspected at destination, which
was to be the importer's address in St. Martins,
New Brunswick. The forms were signed by Mr.
Holm, a Department of Agriculture inspector in
Saint John. As Mr. Justice Heald states, the
importer agreed to this procedure. I take it that
the purpose of the authority to release was to allow
the shipment to pass through the port of entry
without examination.
The three lots were delivered in St. Martins on
Wednesday evening, May 19, 1982. I presume the
lots were admitted to Canada under section 5 of
the Regulations. Their admission was thus subject
to the conditions set out in section 7 of the Regula
tions (as am. by SOR/80-246). Section 7 provides
in part:
7. (1) Any plant or other matter that is admitted into
Canada pursuant to section 5 shall be examined by an inspector
to determine whether it is infested, at the port of entry through
which it is admitted into Canada or at a place inside Canada
specified in writing by an inspector.
(1.1) Any plant or other matter that is admitted into Canada
pursuant to section 5 shall be admitted into Canada only at one
of the following ports of entry:
(h) Saint John, New Brunswick;
(2) Where, pursuant to subsection (1), an inspector has
specified in writing a place at which any plant or other matter
is to be examined, no person shall
(a) move the plant or other matter to any place except the
place specified; or
(b) open any container or unpack any package of that plant
or other matter, without the consent of the inspector.
(3) Where, an inspector inspects any plant or other matter
pursuant to subsection (1) and determines that treatment is
necessary to ensure that it is not infested, the plant or other
matter shall be treated as required by the inspector and again
inspected.
(4) Where, upon any inspection of plant or other matter
referred to in subsection (1) or (3), it appears to an inspector
that the plant or other matter is not infested, he shall issue to
the importer of the plant or other matter a certificate stating
that the plant or other matter was inspected and apparently
was not infested.
(5) Where it appears to an inspector that any plant or other
matter inspected pursuant to subsection (1) or (3) cannot be
treated to the extent necessary to ensure that it is not infested,
the plant or other matter shall be returned to its place of origin
or destroyed.
(6) The cost of treating or destroying any plant or other
matter or returning it to its place of origin pursuant to this
section and all related costs shall be paid by the importer of the
plant or other matter.
On Thursday afternoon, May 20, Mr. Holm, the
inspector who had signed the authority to release
forms, inspected the shipment. I assume that this
inspection was the examination by an inspector
required by subsection 7(1) of the Regulations. In
the course of his examination, Mr. Holm ordered
the importer to spray with an insecticide all plants
from the Bald Hill Nurseries, the nursery located
in Rhode Island. I take it that this order was made
under subsection 7(3) of the Regulations. Mr.
Holm also collected samples of larvae he found in
the Bald Hill Nurseries lot and took them to Saint
John for further examination. He did this because
he was not sure about the identity of the larvae.
These samples, together with samples taken from
another nursery, Maritime Sod, in Saint John,
were taken by Mr. Weiler, Mr. Holm's superior in
Saint John, to Fredericton for identification.
It is at this point that I differ in my review of
the evidence from that of Mr. Justice Heald. Mr.
Justice Heald is of the view that there is no
satisfactory evidence to establish that any of the
larvae brought into Fredericton and later identi
fied as gypsy moths were the same larvae that
were taken by Mr. Holm from the importer's
nursery in St. Martins. With respect, however, I
read the evidence rather differently.
Mr. Weiler brought two vials or containers to
Fredericton; one contained larvae from the import
er's nursery, the other from a nursery in Saint
John. The evidence does not establish, it was said,
that the larvae contained in each vial were sepa
rately examined and identified as gypsy moth
larvae. If larvae from one only of the vials were
examined, one cannot be certain on the evidence
that those larvae were from the importer's nursery.
If the larvae from the two vials were mixed before
examination, once cannot say for certain whether
any particular larva, identified as gypsy moth,
came from the importer's nursery. Unfortunately,
it is unclear from the evidence whether the larvae,
when immersed in alcohol, as all were before they
were examined, were replaced in the same vial or
whether they were mixed.
Dr. Embree, who among others examined the
larvae, was a qualified expert and the Program
Director of Technical Services of the Canadian
Forestry Services. He identified the larvae which
were submitted to him for identification as gypsy
moth larvae. He examined two of the larvae under
a microscope and identified them as gypsy moth
larvae. If this were all he did, the identification
would clearly be suspect. But he examined other
larvae as well, using an identification key classifi
cation system. All the larvae he examined were, he
testified, gypsy moth larvae. He was very clear
under cross-examination that it was not necessary
to examine each larva under a microscope in order
to make a reliable identification. In these circum
stances, it seems to me more likely than not that at
least some of the larvae, identified by him as gypsy
moths, came from the importer's nursery at St.
Martins. It seems to me that, as a scientist called
on to assist in identifying all of the larvae submit
ted to him for his expert opinion, he would not
have identified them as such unless he was reason
ably certain that all of the specimens were gypsy
moth larvae.
Even apart from the expert evidence of Dr.
Embree, there was separate evidence that the
larvae found in the Bald Hill lot were gypsy moth
larvae. Mr. Donald Miller himself, who basically
ran the nursery business, delivered several speci
mens to provincial authorities for identification,
and these specimens were identified as gypsy
moths. Indeed, the respondent conceded in his
memorandum of fact and law that the larvae
found on the Bald Hill lot were gypsy moth larvae.
I now continue with my own review of the
evidence. The larvae were also examined in Fred-
ericton by Dr. L. P. Magasi, the Head of the
Forest Insect and Disease Survey for the Mari-
times Forestry Centre in Fredericton. After the
larvae had been identified as gypsy moth larvae,
Dr. Magasi prepared a memorandum which con
tained a recommendation for destruction by burn
ing. This memorandum was shown to Mr. Weiler
on Friday, May 21, 1982. Later that Friday after-
noon Mr. Weiler, Wayne Parker and Andrew
Watt consulted with one another, apparently by
telephone, and decided, based at least in part on
the memorandum, that the trees and shrubs should
be destroyed. Mr. Parker's office was in Frederic-
ton. He was the District Manager for New Bruns-
wick of the Agricultural Inspection Directorate of
the Department of Agriculture. Mr. Watt was the
Program Manager for Plant Health and Plant
Products. His office was in Moncton. Mr. Parker
and Mr. Watt reported to a common superior. Mr.
Weiler, Mr. Parker and Mr. Watt were themselves
inspectors.
On Friday evening, May 21, Mr. Weiler, who
had returned to Saint John, and Mr. Holm went to
St. Martins. Mr. Holm placed a detention tag on
one of the trees intending to detain the entire
shipment. Mr. Holm and Mr. Weiler saw Mr.
Bertram Miller, who was president of the import
er, and his son Donald Miller, who was
vice-president.
Mr. Holm signed three documents headed
"Notice of Refused Entry", one for each of the
lots he had examined pursuant to section 7 of the
Regulations. Each of these notices was directed to
the importer and contained these printed words:
In accordance with the Plant Quarantine Act and Regulations
you are advised that the plants or related matter described
below are refused entry into Canada and must be returned to
origin or destroyed under the supervision of an inspector.
Each notice described the lot in question, and gave
" gypsy moth infestation" as the reason for refusal.
These notices were given to the Millers.
Mr. Holm also signed a document headed
"Notice of Detention". Again the notice was
directed to the importer. It contained these printed
words:
By authority vested in the "Plant Quarantine Act" we wish to
advise that the contents of the consignment indicated below has
been placed under detention for action or treatment as follows.
Description of the plant or other matter, location, reason for
seizure.
The description of the plant or other matter seized
appearing on the notice of detention in respect of
the Bald Hill lot reads:
All plants from Bald Hill Nurseries Exter R.I. covered by
Phytosanitary certificate 0079 on the property of Bertram S.
Miller St. Martins to be destroyed on location and surrounding
area sprayed with an insecticide.
These notices were then also handed to the
Millers.
The May 21 weekend was a long weekend. The
importer did not destroy the plants and shrubs. On
Tuesday, May 25, Mr. Watt went to Saint John.
He prepared and signed a letter. The letter was
dated May 25, 1982 and it was addressed to
Bertram S. Miller Ltd. The letter stated in part:
This letter is to inform you that the truck load of Nursery
Stock imported by you on May 19, 1982, from the following
Nurseries, was found to be infested with Gypsy Moth Larvae
(Lymantria dispar).
The lots were then identified. The letter continued:
The above mentioned Nursery stock must be burned, and the
surrounding areas sprayed. The burning and spraying will be
conducted by the New Brunswick Department of Natural
Resources personnel under the auspices of the Agriculture
Canada Plant Quarantine Act and Regulations.
The burning and spraying is being conducted under Agriculture
Canada's Plant Quarantine Act Sect. 9(4), the Plant Quaran
tine Regulations sections 7, 14, 15, 21, 22, 25 (1) to (3), and
the Emergency Plant Infestation Regulations Section 2. Copies
of these sections are enclosed.
Mr. Watt and Mr. Parker then took the letter to
St. Martins. Mr. Watt personally served the letter
on the importer. The trees and shrubs were burned
during the afternoon of May 25 by servants of the
provincial Forestry Department who were acting
as agents for the federal Department of Agricul
ture.
I return to the notices that were signed by Mr.
Holm and which were served on Friday evening,
May 21. Mr. Holm was, or course, the inspector
who had performed the inspection pursuant to
section 7 of the Regulations. When Mr. Holm
delivered the Notice of Refused Entry to the
importer, the inspection under section 7, the
inspection to which the importer had consented,
was in effect completed. The Millers clearly did
not consent to the order of destruction which was
served at the same time. They insisted that they be
permitted to return the trees and shrubs to their
place of origin. The very Notice of Refused Entry
form appeared to indicate to them that they had
such an option.
As I read the record, Mr. Holm did not carry
out his inspection of the trees and shrubs pursuant
to paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Act. He proceeded
under section 7 of the Regulations. I see nothing
unreasonable in his inspection or "search". He
inspected with the importer's consent. Even had
the importer not consented, the inspection was a
routine inspection carried out in connection with
the importation into Canada of the ornamental
trees and shrubs. It was purely administrative in
nature raising in the particular circumstances no
unreasonable "search" issue.
The real issue raised by this case, in so far as
section 8 of the Charter is concerned, is whether
what appears to have been a confiscation and
destruction of the trees and shrubs under subsec
tion 9(4) of the Act constituted an unreasonable
seizure.
Section 8 of the Charter reads:
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable
search or seizure.
The section guarantees against both unreason
able search and against unreasonable seizure.
It seems clear to me that subsection 9(4) of the
Act is the authority under which the inspectors
ordered the destruction of the trees and shrubs.
Subsections 9(4) and 9(5) of the Act read in
part:
9....
(4) Whenever an inspector believes on reasonable grounds
that any plant or other matter constitutes a hazard because it is
or could be infested with any pest or constitutes a biological
obstacle to the control of any pest, he may confiscate such plant
or other matter and may order its destruction or disposition
forthwith.
(5) The Governor in Council may make regulations
(b) respecting the destruction or disposition of any plant or
other matter . .. confiscated under this section and the
payment of any reasonable costs incidental to such destruc
tion or disposition.
Section 22 of the Regulations appears to have
been enacted pursuant to paragraph 9(5)(b) of the
Act. Section 22 reads in part:
22. Any plant or other matter ... confiscated pursuant to
subsection 9(4) ... may be destroyed or disposed of in such
manner as the Minister may direct and the owner shall pay, all
reasonable costs incidental to such destruction or disposition.
As I read subsection 9(4), it authorizes an
inspector to confiscate a plant or other matter and
to order its destruction or disposition forthwith
whenever he believes on reasonable grounds that
such plant or other matter constitutes a hazard
because it is or could be infested with a pest. The
subsection, as I read it, does not give an inspector
a choice between on the one hand confiscating and,
on the other, ordering destruction or other disposi
tion. As I construe the subsection, he may order
destruction or other disposition of the plant or
other matter only if he confiscates it. The author
ity must, of course, be exercised by an inspector. I
take it, however, that the authority could be exer
cised by more than one inspector provided they
believed on reasonable grounds that a plant con
stituted a hazard because it is or could be infested
with a pest: see subsection 26(7) of the Interpreta
tion Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. I-23].
I would further observe that subsection 9(4)
confers on an inspector authority to confiscate a
plant or other matter and to order its destruction
or other disposition by the person from whom it is
confiscated. But that is all it authorizes an inspec
tor to do. It does not authorize the inspector either
himself or through his agents to destroy or other
wise dispose of confiscated matter. Section 22 of
the Regulations, however, does in effect vest this
power of destruction in the Minister in that he
may direct the manner in which a plant or other
matter, confiscated under subsection 9(4), should
be destroyed or otherwise disposed of. I would
construe this authority broadly. I would interpret
it as being susceptible of authorizing not only the
precise manner of destruction, but also as being
wide enough to authorize the actual destruction of
the plants by departmental officials where the
owner of the plants has failed to execute the. order
issued under subsection 9(4).
The authority conferred on the Minister by sec
tion 22 of the Regulations, so far as it relates to
destruction and disposition of confiscated plants
and other materials, is a power supplemental to
the power conferred on inspectors by subsection
9(4) of the Act. Section 22 of the Regulations does
not empower the Minister to confiscate. That
power is to be exercised by an inspector under
subsection 9(4) of the Act. But the authority
vested in the Minister by section 22 to have the
destruction carried out by the Department itself,
while important, is nevertheless not, in my opinion,
of such a nature as to require the Minister to
exercise it personally.
I would construe section 22 of the Regulations
as conferring on the Minister an authority which
he could delegate or even an authority which
senior officials of the Department might exercise
absent express delegation if delegation were "con-
veyed generally and unofficially by the officer's
hierarchical superiors in accordance with depart
mental practice." See De Smith, Judicial Review
of Administrative Action (4th ed.), at page 307.
I would quote this passage from the judgment of
Mr. Justice Dickson (as he then was) in R. v.
Harrison, [1977] 1 S.C.R. 238, at pages 245 and
246:
In my opinion there is implied authority in the Attorney
General to delegate the power to instruct, in s. 605(1). I do not
think that s. 605(1) requires the Attorney General personally to
appeal or personally to instruct counsel to appeal in every case.
Although there is a general rule of construction in law that a
person endowed with a discretionary power should exercise it
personally (delegatus non pot est delegare) that rule can be
displaced by the language, scope or object of a particular
administrative scheme. A power to delegate is often implicit in
a scheme empowering a Minister to act. As Professor Willis
remarked in "Delegatus Non Potest Delegare", (1943), 21
Can. Bar Rev. 257 at p. 264:
... in their application of the maxim delegates non potest
delegare to modern governmental agencies the Courts have
in most cases preferred to depart from the literal construc
tion of the words of the statute which would require them to
read in the word "personally" and to adopt such a construc
tion as will best accord with the facts of modern government
which, being carried on in theory by elected representatives
but in practice by civil servants or local government officers,
undoubtedly requires them to read in the words "or any
person authorized by it".
See also S. A. DeSmith, Judicial Review of Administrative
Action, 3d ed., at p. 271. Thus, where the exercise of a
discretionary power is entrusted to a Minister of the Crown it
may be presumed that the acts will be performed, not by the
Minister in person, but by responsible officials in his depart
ment: Carlton. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Works, ([1943] 2
All E.R. 560 (C.A.)). The tasks of a Minister of the Crown in
modern times are so many and varied that it is unreasonable to
expect them to be performed personally. It is to be supposed
that the Minister will select deputies and departmental officials
of experience and competence, and that such appointees, for
whose conduct the Minister is accountable to the Legislature,
will act on behalf of the Minister, within the bounds of their
respective grants of authority, in the discharge of ministerial
responsibilities. Any other approach would but lead to adminis
trative chaos and inefficiency. It is true that in the present case
there is no evidence that the Attorney General of British
Columbia personally instructed Mr. McDiarmid to act on his
behalf in appealing judgments or verdicts of acquittal of trial
courts but it is reasonable to assume the "Director, Criminal
Law" of the Province would have that authority to instruct.
Mr. Parker testified, with reference to section
22 of the Regulations, that it was his understand
ing that "it's delegated through the system". And
Mr. Watt testified that, after making the decision
to destroy by burning, he consulted and had the
approval of a senior official in Ottawa, Mr. Bruce
Hopper, who was then Acting Director of the
Plant Health Division of the Department. Mr.
Watt was questioned in cross-examination about
section 22 of the Regulations. He was asked
whether the section did not imply that he had to
refer a decision to destroy to the "highest author
ity in the Department". Mr. Watt replied that that
was why in situations such as this the matter is
referred to the Director of the Division.
The only question, as I see it, is whether there is
evidence to support a conclusion that when Mr.
Bruce Hopper approved Mr. Watt's proposal to
burn the importer's trees and shrubs, he exercised
ministerial authority under section 22 of the
Regulations.
There is some conflict on this point between Mr.
Parker's evidence and that of Mr. Watt. Both
agree that the authority under section 22 of the
Regulations is delegated, but there appears to be a
difference over how extensive the delegation is.
Mr. Watt's evidence is, I think, more likely to
represent the true situation, and what is more, it
does indicate, quite clearly, that it is a practice
followed in situations arising under section 22 to
refer such a matter to the Director of the Plant
Health Division. I need not consider what the
situation might be if the power had been delegated
to a person lower in rank than the Director of a
Division. The question is a difficult one, but in the
circumstances I would treat Mr. Hopper's approv
al as complying with section 22 of the Regulations.
In my view Mr. Watt would not have proceeded
with the burn had Mr. Hopper not given his
approval.
I have had some concern over the question
whether there was a confiscation of the trees and
shrubs as well as an order for their destruction. It
seems to me, however, that it is quite possible that
Mr. Holm's tagging of the trees on Friday evening,
May 21, could have been a confiscation, having in
mind that his order to destroy was about to be
issued. Also the order he issued itself speaks of
"seizure". But at any rate, the very seizure of the
trees and shrubs on Tuesday afternoon and their
destruction by fire would, in my view, have oper
ated as a confiscation even if Mr. Holm's previous
tagging did not.
What was involved in this case was, of course,
more than a mere seizure: it was a confiscation
and destruction. Mr. Justice Hugessen addresses
the question whether section 8 of the Charter
reaches the confiscation and destruction provisions
of subsection 9(4) of the Act. I, too, would prefer
to leave that question to another day. I assume, as
does he, that, for purposes of this case, the confis
cation and destruction of the importer's trees and
shrubs did constitute a seizure within the meaning
of that term as used in section 8 of the Charter.
The power to confiscate is a very considerable
power. This is particularly so where the power is
not conditioned on the fact of infestation, but on a
belief on reasonable (but possibly mistaken)
grounds that the plants are a hazard.
Was the seizure unreasonable within the mean
ing of that term as used in section 8 of the
Charter?
I would first observe that the seizure involved in
this case was not a "search and seizure" in a
criminal law context. It was a seizure effected in
the course of administering the Plant Quarantine
Act. It was a step in an administrative process. It
is, I think, important to have this distinction in
mind. I quote from Mr. Justice Martin in R. v.
Rao (1984), 12 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (Ont. C.A.), at
page 112:
In my view ... a clear distinction must be drawn between a
general power to enter private premises without a warrant to
search for contraband or evidence of crime and a power con
ferred on designated officials to enter premises for inspection
and audit purposes and to seize records, samples or products in
relation to businesses and activities subject to government
regulation.
It would, as I see it, be undesirable to introduce
into our administrative law system a relatively
inflexible warrant requirement. I would hope that
the "unreasonable" standard referred to in section
8 of the Charter should be the effective guide. This
would leave room for developing more flexible and
imaginative, but nonetheless satisfactory, safe
guards in the administrative area through legisla
tion and regulations: see, for example Donovan v.
Dewey, 452 U.S. 594 (1981); and see, generally,
Reid and Young, "Administrative Search and Sei
zure under the Charter", (1985) 10 Queen's Law
Journal 392.
In my view, the interests protected by the guar
antee of security against unreasonable search on
the one hand and against unreasonable seizure on
the other are not identical, though often they may
overlap: a seizure is usually made in the course of
a search. Unreasonable search impairs one's right
to privacy; unreasonable seizure impairs one's
right to undisturbed possession. In this case, once
the "search" was over, the importer's claim to
privacy in respect of the trees and shrubs was very
limited, if it existed at all. The trees and shrubs in
question had been examined, and remained in
plain view in the open space where the truck had
been unloaded.
The importer, of course, owned the trees and
shrubs. The importer's interest in the trees and
shrubs immediately before their confiscation was,
for relevant purposes, purely proprietory: its inter
est was in retaining undisturbed possession of
them, possession free from seizure. There was,
however, a strong conflicting public interest. Once
the inspectors had reasonable cause to believe that
the trees and shrubs were infested with gypsy
moths, a dangerous pest, there was a powerful
public interest in safeguarding New Brunswick
forests against what might well have been a very
damaging infestation. The Trial Judge said [at
page 76]:
In the inspectors' views, further spraying would not destroy the
larvae and returning the infested trees back to the United
States could cause further infestation. They considered the
larvae to be a dangerous pest that had to be destroyed at once.
The inspectors felt that they had reasonable grounds to believe
that the trees were infested with a pest .... [Underlining
added.]
In his reasons for judgment the Trial Judge
relies on the judgment of Mr. Justice Dickson (as
he then was) in Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc.,
[1984] 2 S.C.R. 145. Subsection 10(1) of the
Combines Investigation Act [R.S.C. 1970, c.
C-23] authorized the Director of Investigation and
Research of the Combines Investigation Branch or
his representative to enter, in an inquiry under the
Act, any premises in which the Director believed
there might be evidence relevant to the matters
being inquired into. Subsection 10(3) of the Act
required the Director, before exercising the power
conferred by subsection (1) to produce a certifi
cate from a member of the Restrictive Trade
Practices Commission, which might be granted on
the ex parte application of the Director, authoriz
ing the exercise of such power. The Supreme
Court held that subsections 10(1) and 10(3) were
inconsistent with section 8 of the Charter because
they failed to specify an appropriate standard for
the issuance of warrants and failed to designate an
impartial arbiter to issue them.
Of section 8 of the Charter Mr. Justice Dickson
[as he then was] said at page 158: "It guarantees a
broad and general right to be secure from unrea
sonable search and seizure." He said at page 157:
Since the proper approach to the interpretation of the Chart
er of Rights and Freedoms is a purposive one, before it is
possible to assess the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the
impact of a search or of a statute authorizing a search, it is first
necessary to specify the purpose underlying s. 8: in other words,
to delineate the nature of the interests it is meant to protect.
Historically, the common law protections with regard to
governmental searches and seizures were based on the right to
enjoy property and were linked to the law of trespass. It was on
this basis that in the great case of Entick v. Carrington (1765),
19 St. Tr. 1029, 1 Wils. K.B. 275, the Court refused to
countenance a search purportedly authorized by the executive,
to discover evidence that might link the plaintiff to certain
seditious libels. Lord Camden prefaced his discussion of the
rights in question by saying, at p. 1066 [19 St. Tr. 1029]:
The great end, for which men entered into society, was to
preserve their property. That right is preserved sacred and
incommunicable in all instances, where it has not been taken
away or abridged by some public law for the good of the
whole.
He said at pages 158 and 159:
In my view the interests protected by s. 8 are of a wider
ambit than those enunciated in Entick v. Carrington. Section 8
is an entrenched constitutional provision. It is not therefore
vulnerable to encroachment by legislative enactments in the
same way as common law protections. There is, further, noth
ing in the language of the section to restrict it to the protection
of property or to associate it with the law of trespass. It
guarantees a broad and general right to be secure from unrea
sonable search and seizure.
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution,
also guarantees a broad right. It provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures
shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upor
probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particu
larly describing the place to be searched, and the persons of
things to be seized.
Construing this provision in Katz v. United States, 389 U.S.
347 (1967), Stewart J. delivering the majority opinion of the
United States Supreme Court declared at p. 351 that "the
Fourth Amendment protects people, not places". Justice Stew-
art rejected any necessary connection between that Amendment
and the notion of trespass. With respect, I believe this approach
is equally appropriate in construing the protections in s. 8 of the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
In Katz, Stewart J. discussed the notion of a right to privacy,
which he described at p. 350 as "his right to be let alone by
other people". Although Stewart J. was careful not to identify
the Fourth Amendment exclusively with the protection of this
right, nor to see the Amendment as the only provision in the
Bill of Rights relevant to its interpretation, it is clear that this
notion played a prominent role in his construction of the nature
and the limits of the American constitutional protection against
unreasonable search and seizure.
He also said at pages 159 and 160:
Like the Supreme Court of the United States, I would be
wary of foreclosing the possibility that the right to be secure
against unreasonable search and seizure might protect interests
beyond the right of privacy, but for purposes of the present
appeal I am satisfied that its protections go at least that far.
The guarantee of security from unreasonable search and sei
zure only protects a reasonable expectation. This limitation on
the right guaranteed by s. 8, whether it is expressed negatively
as freedom from "unreasonable" search and seizure, or posi
tively as an entitlement to a "reasonable" expectation of priva
cy, indicates that an assessment must be made as to whether in
a particular situation the public's interest in being left alone by
government must give way to the government's interest in
intruding on the individual's privacy in order to advance its
goals, notably those of law enforcement.
Mr. Justice Dickson then considered the time at
which an assessment must be made, an assessment
of whether "in a particular situation the public's
interest in being left alone by government must
give way to the government's interest in intruding
on the individual's privacy in order to advance its
goals, notably those of law enforcement." [Empha-
sis added.] Mr. Justice Dickson said at pages 160
and 161:
If the issue to be resolved in assessing the constitutionality of
searches under s. 10 were in fact the governmental interest in
carrying out a given search outweighed that of the individual in
resisting the governmental intrusion upon his privacy, then it
would be appropriate to determine the balance of the compet
ing interests after the search had been conducted. Such a post
facto analysis would, however, be seriously at odds with the
purpose of s. 8. That purpose is, as I have said, to protect
individuals from unjustified state intrusions upon their privacy.
That purpose requires a means of preventing unjustified
searches before they happen, not simply of determining, after
the fact, whether they ought to have occurred in the first place.
This, in my view, can only be accomplished by a system of prior
authorization, not one of subsequent validation.
A requirement of prior authorization, usually in the form of
a valid warrant, has been a consistent prerequisite for a valid
search and seizure both at common law and under most
statutes. Such a requirement puts the onus on the state to
demonstrate the superiority of its interest to that of the
individual. As such it accords with the apparent intention of the
Charter to prefer, where feasible, the right of the individual to
be free from state interference to the interests of the state in
advancing its purposes through such interference.
I recognize that it may not be reasonable in every instance to
insist on prior authorization in order to validate governmental
intrusions upon individuals' expectations of privacy. Neverthe
less, where it is feasible to obtain prior authorization, I would
hold that such autorization is a precondition for a valid search
and seizure.
Here also, the decision in Katz, supra, is relevant. In United
States v. Rabinowitz, 339 U.S. 56 (1950), the Supreme Court
of the United States had held that a search without warrant
was not ipso facto unreasonable. Seventeen years later, how
ever, in Katz, Stewart J. concluded that a warrantless search
was prima facie "unreasonable" under the Fourth Amendment.
The terms of the Fourth Amendment are not identical to those
of s. 8 and American decisions can be transplanted to the
Canadian context only with the greatest caution. Nevertheless,
I would in the present instance respectfully adopt Stewart J.'s
formulation as equally applicable to the concept of "unreason-
ableness" under s. 8, and would require the party seeking to
justify a warrantless search to rebut this presumption of
unreasonableness.
It is, I think, important, when reading these
quotations, to bear in mind that Mr. Justice Dick-
son was proceeding on the basis that the interest
involved in Southam was the interest in privacy.
Obviously, prior authorization was, then, of criti
cal importance. An unlawful search would destroy
the privacy interest merely by being conducted.
The damage suffered would be beyond adequate
remedy by way of damages. This would not neces
sarily be so where the interference is with a prop
erty right. Such an interference, if wrongful, might
well be adequately compensated by an award of
damages.
Thus in Southam Mr. Justice Dickson very
clearly held that privacy was an interest protected
by section 8 of the Charter; he did not, however.
rule out the possibility that the section might
extend protection to interests other than privacy.
As indicated earlier in these reasons, I am assum
ing, for purposes of this appeal, that the confisca
tion and destruction of the importer's trees and
shrubs was a seizure within the meaning of that
term as used in section 8 of the Charter, despite
the fact that there was not only a taking of posses
sion but a confiscation and destruction. The ques
tion, as I see it, is whether a taking of possession
by way of seizure could be a "seizure" within
section 8 if it did not also constitute an "invasion
of privacy".
It would seem to me that privacy is the most
important interest safeguarded by section 8. I am
of opinion, however, that it is not the only interest
so protected. True, we have come a long way since
Entick v. Carrington [(1765), 19 St. Tr. 1029; 2
Wils K.B. 275; 95 E.R. 807 (K.B.)], and there
have been changes in the relative values of "prop-
erty" and "person". It does not, however, follow
that property is not a value protected in any way
by section 8 of the Charter.
"Security of property" was deliberately omitted
from section 7 of the Charter. Security of property
is not, therefore, accorded the protection guaran
teed by section 7 to security of the person. It is not
a necessary consequence, however, that a particu
lar aspect of a property owner's interest in his
property may not be afforded Charter protection.
It does appear to me that section 8, in its very
terms, does afford protection to a particular inter
est in property: the interest a person has in being
secure against an unreasonable seizure of his prop
erty. There may, of course, be questions about the
meaning of "seizure" as the term is used in section
8 of the Charter and about the kind of property
interests protected by the provision. The answers
to these questions may turn in large part on the
long history of our judicial experience with "search
and seizure". It will no doubt be wise to proceed
case by case.
In this case we have eminently seizable goods
and it is my view that, as I have indicated, for the
purposes of this appeal the importer's trees and
shrubs were in fact seized.
I turn to the question whether the seizure was
unreasonable for the sole reason that it was con
ducted without a warrant.
In the United States it has been held that
administrative searches of private residences and
even of private commercial premises are subject to
Fourth Amendment protection, although in the
case of private commercial premises there is a
greater latitude in respect of warrantless searches;
this is so because the expectation of privacy of the
owner of commercial premises "differs significant
ly from the sanctity accorded an individual's
home": see Donovan v. Dewey, referred to above,
at pages 598-599.
The proposition that administrative searches of
residences and private commercial premises are
subject to Fourth Amendment protection must,
however, be considered with an important reserva
tion in mind. In Camara v. Municipal Court of
San Francisco, 387 U.S. 523 (1967) (in which it
was held that the Fourth Amendment is applicable
to an administrative search of a private home),
Mr. Justice White said at page 539:
Since our holding emphasizes the controlling standard of
reasonableness, nothing we say today is intended to foreclose
prompt inspections, even without a warrant, that the law has
traditionally upheld in emergency situation. See North Ameri-
can Cold Storage Co. v. City of Chicago, 211 U.S. 306, 29
S.Ct. 101, 53 L.Ed. 195 (seizure of unwholesome food); Jacob-
son v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11, 25 S.Ct. 358, 49 L.Ed. 643
(compulsory smallpox vaccination); Compagnie Française v.
Board of Health, 186 U.S. 380, 22 S.Ct. 811, 46 L.Ed. 1209
(health quarantine); Kroplin v. Truax, 119 Ohio St. 610, 165
N.E. 498 (summary destruction of tubercular cattle). [Under-
lining added.]
I take it that the situations indicated in this
quotation are situations in which a warrantless
seizure may be justified. It should be noted that at
this point in the appeal I am no longer dealing
with a search issue: the inspection, the "search",
had been completed before the goods were seized.
Mr. Justice White did not seek to develop the
nature or scope of the "emergency situation" to
which he referred except to the extent that he
mentioned examples of it. What I am about to say
about the nature and scope of the "emergency
situation" are thus my own reflections.
"Unwholesome food" poses a threat to public
health, "tubercular cattle" to public health and to
neighbouring herds. They give rise, as I see it, to
"emergency situations", situations in which
prompt action may be required. In such situations
a warrant is not necessary for a "seizure" if such a
seizure is authorized by statute and the terms of
that statute are in themselves reasonable. The very
language of subsection 9(4) of the Act is the
language of emergency. The subsection speaks of
"hazard", it speaks of "infestation by pests", and
it speaks of "destruction or disposition forthwith".
Such a situation constitutes an "emergency" in
itself. And I am of opinion that in this case, as
long as the standard set in subsection 9(4) is
reasonable and the inspectors acted within that
standard, they acted within an "emergency situa
tion" and thus neither a warrant nor other authori
zation from an impartial arbiter was a necessary
precondition.
I would also note that the delay in executing the
subsection 9(4) order over the long weekend did
not detract from the "emergency situation".
Indeed, given my interpretation of subsection 9(4),
there was no delay in executing the order as the
officials used the time to seek higher authority in
order to be able to act themselves pursuant to
section 22 of the Regulations.
A government official who makes a warrantless
seizure in such a situation may, however, later be
sued or the government may be sued. In such an
action the issues would be whether the terms of the
Act provide a reasonable standard for a seizure
and whether the official acted in accordance with
those standards. Depending on the circumstances,
the action might be for violation of a section 8
Charter right, or an action in tort.
Once it is decided, as I have decided, that the
warrantless seizure as such did not offend section 8
of the Charter, the only issues left to be dealt with
are: whether the terms of subsection 9(4) in them
selves are reasonable, and whether the inspectors
acted in accordance with the authority vested in
them by that subsection.
I turn to subsection 9(4) of the Act and I quote
it once again:
9....
(4) Whenever an inspector believes on reasonable grounds
that any plant or other matter constitutes a hazard because it is
or could be infested with any pest or constitutes a biological
obstacle to the control of any pest, he may confiscate such plant
or other matter and may order its destruction or disposition
forthwith.
I am of opinion that the standard provided by
subsection 9(4) of the Act is a reasonable stan
dard: to act under the subsection, an inspector
must believe on reasonable grounds that the plants
or other matter to be confiscated are hazardous
because they are or could be infested with a pest. I
confess, however, that I was somewhat hesitant on
this point because of the stipulation that an inspec
tor may act when he believes on reasonable
grounds that the plants or other matter are or
could be infested. I am satisfied, however, that the
public interest in preventing the spread of infesta
tion is sufficiently strong to warrant this rather
low standard.
The respondent submitted that confiscation
without compensation would be enough to brand
the seizure of the importer's goods as unreason
able. For purposes of section 8 of the Charter, I
would not regard the submission as a relevant
consideration. In determining whether a seizure is
unreasonable, it is not pertinent whether or not the
statute authorizing it provides compensation for a
loss incurred as a result. "Reasonableness" in the
section does not embrace such inquiries as whether
or not the policy upon which the legislation is
based is good or bad: see Rosenberg, Unreasonable
Search and Seizure: Hunter v. Southam Inc.
(1985), 19 U.B.C. Law Rev. 271, at pages 278 and
279.
I will next consider whether the inspectors acted
within subsection 9(4). As I have noted earlier, the
decision made by the "inspectors" on Friday after
noon, May 21, was the effective decision to confis
cate and destroy the importer's trees and shrubs.
The effect of the order to destroy, signed on Friday
night, was to put the importer under an immediate
duty to destroy, provided, of course, that the order
was validly made. There are several conditions to
the validity of an order to destroy made by an
inspector or inspectors under subsection 9(4) of
the Act. One is that the inspectors must, in fact,
believe that the plants confiscated either are or
could be infested with a pest and thus constituted a
hazard. The Trial Judge made a clear finding that
the inspectors did have such a belief. But subsec
tion 9(4) of the Act also requires that an inspector,
acting under the subsection, must have reasonable
grounds for his belief.
The respondent submitted that the inspectors
lacked reasonable grounds for their belief that the
trees and shrubs were in fact infested because, it
was submitted, such larvae as were found were
either dead or quite inert: they were, it was sub
mitted, not capable of doing damage.
There is, however, evidence that at least some of
the larvae discovered on the Bald Hill Nurseries
lot were alive: Mr. Holm so testified. And Mr.
Weiler, in his discovery evidence which was read
in at trial / sfated that the larvae which he had seen
were alive. Mr. Parker had looked at some of the
larvae brought to Fredericton by Mr. Weiler, and
he testified that they moved when touched. Mr.
Watt did not, of course, actually see any of the
larvae, but he was entitled to rely on information
he received from officials of his Department,
including Mr. Parker and Mr. Weiler. He stated
that he was particularly persuaded to order
destruction of the trees and shrubs by information
he received from Mr. Parker. He also had read to
him the memorandum signed by Dr. Magasi which
referred to live larvae.
In my view there was sufficient evidence to find
that live gypsy moth larvae were found on the Bald
Hill Nurseries lot; thus the inspectors had reason
to believe that at least the Bald Hill lot carried
pests.
It was also argued, however, that the inspectors
had no reasonable grounds for believing that either
of the other two lots, the Cherry Hill Nurseries lot
and the Weston Nurseries lot, was infested with
gypsy moth larvae. And it is quite true that Mr.
Holm found no larvae on either of those lots.
However, it is also true that the three lots of trees
were all brought into Canada in the same closed
truck. I am not persuaded that this circumstance
would be irrelevant to a conclusion that all three
lots might well have been infested. It may well be
that, in deciding that the entire shipment should be
destroyed, the inspectors erred on the side of cau
tion. But, as indicated above, they were entitled to
do so, and, when faced with the possibility of an
"invasion" of gypsy moths it would be acceptable,
in my view, to be very cautious indeed.
My conclusion from all of the foregoing is that,
in the circumstances of this case, though there
may have been a seizure within the meaning of
that term in section 8 of the Charter, it was not
unreasonable for the sole reason that it was con
ducted without a warrant: the standard in subsec
tion 9(4), given that it is premised upon an emer
gency, is in itself reasonable, and the inspectors
acted within that standard.
The importer also invoked paragraphs 1(a) and
1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights. But the
importer, since it is a corporation, cannot rely on
either of those paragraphs.
The respondent also relied on paragraph 2(e) of
the Bill of Rights. But the inspector's order to
destroy was made in what I have described as an
"emergency situation", that is, under subsection
9(4). There was a duty to act fairly, but in this
emergency situation that duty did not extend to a
duty to grant a hearing. See White v. Redfern
(1879), 5 Q.B.D. 15 and De Verteuil v. Knaggs,
[1918] A.C. 557 (P.C.), at pages 560-561.
Reliance was also placed on section 7 of the
Charter. But section 7 provides no protection
against deprivation of security of property. "Life,
liberty and security of the person" are the values
protected by the section. Nor is there any merit in
the respondent's reliance on section 15 of the
Charter. Indeed, section 15 was not even in force
at the time these events took place.
I now turn to the question whether the respon
dent is entitled to succeed on the basis of the
principle in Manitoba Fisheries.
The principle in Manitoba Fisheries is based on
the proposition that a statute authorizing the
Crown to take property imposes an obligation to
compensate the person whose property is taken.
The duty to compensate, as I have said in another
case, "is implicit in the Act itself; in conventional
terms it is based on an implied term of the stat
ute": see A. M. Smith & Co., Ltd. y. R., [1982] 1
F.C. 153 (C.A.), at page 160.
As Mr. Justice Heald indicates, the presumption
that a right to compensation is implicit in the
statute can be displaced by clear words only. It
remains, however, that, since it is based on an
implied term, it can be displaced. Whether or not
it is depends on the provisions of the statute itself.
In B.C. Medical Assn. v. R. in Right of B.C.
(1984), 58 B.C.L.R. 361 (C.A.), Mr. Justice Lam-
bert said at page 366:
The rule is not a purely mechanical matter of examining the
legislation and asking whether there is an express written
reference to the fact that the taking is to be without compensa
tion, in words that say "without compensation of any kind", or
some equivalent; and that, failing such words, compensation
must be paid.
Rather, it is the intention of the legislature that is being
sought. The legislature will not be presumed to have coun
tenanced an injustice, unless the contrary intention appears.
But the rule does not override the legislative intention. It is not
a device by which the courts can enable a claimant to outwit
the legislature.
I will quote subsection 3(2) and paragraph 4(h)
of the Act. These provisions read:
3....
(2) The Minister may order compensation to be paid in
respect of any plant or other matter destroyed or prohibited or
restricted from sale or any restriction of the use of any property
or premises pursuant to the Act in the amounts approved by,
and subject to the terms and conditions prescribed by, the
regulations.
4. The Governor in Council may make regulations for pre
venting or controlling the introduction or admission into
Canada, the spreading within Canada or the conveying within
or from Canada of any pest or any plant or other matter
referred to in section 3 and without limiting the generality of
the foregoing may for that purpose make regulations
(h) for the awarding of compensation by the Minister for any
plant or other matter destroyed or prohibited or restricted
from sale or for any restriction of the use of any property or
premises pursuant to this Act, and prescribing the terms and
conditions upon which any such compensation may be
awarded and the maximum amounts of any such
compensation;
These provisions, as I read them, would seem to be
at odds with an implicit right, based on the Act, to
compensation. If there were such an implicit right,
I could see vesting in the Minister an authority to
regulate or even to limit the right. I, however, find
that a statutory right in the Minister to "order
compensation to be paid in respect of any plant or
other matter destroyed" is inconsistent with a gen
eral statutory right to compensation existing apart
from a Minister's order. This is, to me, a suf
ficiently clear indication that the statute is not
intended implicitly to provide compensation.
Finally, I would observe that the Crown submit
ted that, in awarding damages, the Trial Judge
erred in that he proceeded on the basis that it had
been admitted that the value of the goods
destroyed was $13,073.50. The Crown submitted
that it had made no such admission. And it is clear
from pages 33 and 34 of the transcript that the
Crown admitted only that the purchase price of
the goods was $8,429.19 in Canadian funds; the
price had been paid in U.S. dollars. The importer
claimed and was allowed by the Trial Judge a
mark-up of fifty per cent, making a total of
$13,073.50.
Counsel for the Crown argued that the goods, at
the time of their destruction had little or no
market value because they were infested with
gypsy moth larvae. If it were necessary to decide
the question, I would agree with this submission. I
have decided that the inspectors had reasonable
grounds for believing that the goods were hazard
ous because they were infested with gypsy moths
and that they properly ordered the importer to
destroy the goods. Thus, even if the importer had
succeeded in establishing any of its claims, it
would have been very difficult, if not impossible, to
assess damages, or, indeed, to award any compen
sation on the Manitoba Fisheries principle, even if
it were applicable.
For all of these reasons I would allow the appeal
and dismiss the respondent's action. I agree with
Mr. Justice Hugessen's proposed disposition as to
costs.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
HUGESSEN J.: This is an appeal from a judg
ment of the Trial Division condemning the Crown
to pay damages to plaintiff in the amount of
$13,439.02 and costs.
The essential facts can be shortly stated. The
plaintiff imported nursery stock from the United
States. By common agreement, the stock was not
inspected at the border but at plaintiff's own prem
ises soon after its arrival. The inspection was con
sensual. The inspectors found some of the trees to
contain larvae which were later identified to their
satisfaction (and, it may be added, to that of
plaintiff's officers as well) to be the gypsy moth.
The inspectors formed the opinion that there was a
reasonable danger that the whole shipment was or
would shortly become infested. The gypsy moth is
a dangerous parasite, especially in a country and a
province whose economy depends to a substantial
extent on the forestry. The inspectors confiscated
the trees and ordered the plaintiff to destroy them.
The order was not obeyed and, after a delay of
four days, the inspectors destroyed the trees
themselves.
The Trial Judge maintained the action on the
basis that plaintiff had been the victim of an
unreasonable search and seizure, contrary to sec
tion 8 of the Charter of Rights. It is important,
however, to note that it was the Trial Judge's view
that the unreasonableness flowed from the provi
sions of the statute itself and not from any improp
er action on the part of the officials. Indeed the
Trial Judge [at page 79] went out of his way to
describe the inspectors, most of whom he had seen
and heard, as "highly responsible officers". At
another point of his reasons, he stated [at pages
75-76]:
I am fully satisfied that the inspectors carried out their duty
as they were obligated to do under the Plant Quarantine Act
and Regulations.
and again [at page 76]:
My appreciation of the evidence is that the inspectors did not
refuse to hear the plaintiffs version. They did discuss the
matter with Donald Miller and his father, the president of the
plaintiff company, but the inspectors did not accept their
proposed solutions. In the inspectors' views, further spraying
would not destroy the larvae and returning the infested trees
back to the United States could cause further infestation. They
considered the larvae to be a dangerous pest that had to be
destroyed at once. The inspectors felt that they had reasonable
grounds to believe that the trees were infested with a pest and
were thus authorized under the Plant Quarantine Act to order
their destruction.
Those were findings which the Trial Judge was
fully entitled to make upon the evidence before
him and with which we, as a court of appeal, have
no right to interfere. 4
Indeed the evidence of the infestation by gypsy
moths and its danger did not come from the Crown
alone. Following the first visit by the inspectors,
Mr. Donald Miller, plaintiff's vice-president, him
self took samples of larvae from several of the
trees and delivered them to the provincial forestry
department, in Fredericton, for testing. In fact, for
some undisclosed reason, the provincial authorities
passed the larvae on to the Canadian Forestry
Service laboratory of Environment Canada. The
result appears in a letter to Mr. Miller which was
produced as an exhibit at trial. It bears repeating:
Your sample of larvae collected on May 20 from linden, maple
and oak nursery stock brought in from Rhode Island, has been
identified as gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar. This major hard
wood pest in the northeastern U.S. has until now, thanks to
rigidly enforced regulations, been successfully excluded from
our woodlands in New Brunswick as well as other Maritime
Provinces.
In view of this alarming discovery and the serious consequences
which could easily result, if these gypsy moth caterpillars are
not absolutely contained, I will be notifying Agriculture
Canada, Food Production and Inspection Operations, in Saint
John. This agency, I understand, is already advising you on a
specific course of action with respect to gypsy moth.
In the meantime, every attempt should be made to eradicate
every possible trace of these caterpillars — so much is at stake!
The enclosed leaflet contains pertinent life history details.
In the light of this material, plaintiff simply
cannot be heard to argue that the larvae were not
gypsy moth or that the Trial Judge's findings of
fact in this regard were not fully justified by the
evidence.
The issue therefore becomes one of law: are the
provisions of the Plant Quarantine Act and the
Regulations such that they cannot survive the
coming into force of the Charter of Rights?
There can be no doubt that the Plant Quaran
tine Act provides for search and seizure (and,
° Stein et al. v. 'Kathy K" et al. (The Ship), [ 1976] 2 S.C.R.
802.
indeed, confiscation and destruction) of property
without prior judicial authorization. Particular ref
erence may be made to paragraph 6(1)(a) and to
subsection 9(4).
6. (1) An inspector may at any reasonable time
(a) enter any place or premises in which he reasonably
believes there is any pest or plant or other matter to which
this Act applies, and may open any container or package
found therein or examine anything found therein that he has
reason to believe contains any such pest or plant or other
matter, and take samples thereof ....
9....
(4) Whenever an inspector believes on reasonable grounds
that any plant or other matter constitutes a hazard because it is
or could be infested with any pest or constitutes a biological
obstacle to the control of any pest, he may confiscate such plant
or other matter and may order its destruction or disposition
forthwith.
The Trial Judge based his decision primarily on
his finding that paragraph 6(1)(a) was incompat
ible with section 8 of the Charter in that it allowed
for a warrantless search in all circumstances.
Strictly speaking that finding was irrelevant to the
present case since, as I have indicated, there was
agreement between plaintiff and the inspectors
that the imported shipment would be inspected at
plaintiffs premises. Accordingly, the inspection
was consensual and the inspectors did not need to
call on the powers granted them by paragraph
6(1)(a). The matter does not end there, however,
for the inspection was followed by confiscation and
destruction pursuant to subsection 9(4).
While it was argued before us that section 8 of
the Charter does not protect property rights and
therefore does not reach the confiscation and
destruction provisions of subsection 9(4), I prefer
to leave that difficult question for another day. I
am prepared to assume, for the purposes of the
present decision, that the confiscation and destruc
tion of the plaintiffs nursery stock by the inspec
tors constituted a seizure within the meaning of
section 8 of the Charter. Even with that assump
tion, however, I do not think that the provisions of
subsection 9(4) are inoperable as permitting an
"unreasonable" seizure.
In evaluating the impact of the Charter and, in
particular, of section 8 upon any given statutory
provision, it seems to me that regard must be had
both to the text and to the context of that
provision.
As far as the text is concerned, I note that both
paragraph 6(1)(a) and subsection 9(4) contain
their own requirement of reasonableness. Any
action which the inspector is authorised to take
must be founded on reasonable belief. While this,
of course, does not foreclose a finding that the
provisions are rendered inoperable by the Charter,
it is a factor which must be borne in mind when we
are considering, as we are here, a claim to
infringement of property rights wholly divorced
from any question of privacy or of freedom from
oppressive prosecution. If the inspectors have acted
unreasonably, their action is illegal for that reason
and the citizen has his recourse without any need
to call the Charter in aid. As indicated above,
however, the Trial Judge made specific findings
negativing any claim the plaintiff might assert on
that basis in the present case.
As to the context, it is my opinion that the test
of what is "unreasonable" for the purposes of
applying section 8 of the Charter will vary from
case to case. Without attempting to be exhaustive,
it seems to me that one will always have to look to
the purpose of the statutory scheme authorising
the search and seizure, to the nature of the prop
erty or things seized, to the character of the prem
ises where the search and seizure may normally be
expected to be carried out and to the legitimate
interests and expectations not only of the public at
large but also of the person who is subject to the
search and seizure. What is reasonable in terms of
entry into and inspection of a restaurant kitchen or
a commercial dairy, or a factory, or a mine will
differ radically from what is reasonable for the
search and seizure of private papers in a dwelling
house. By the same token, there is a distinction
between a statutory scheme which obviously envis
ages routine inspections and testing at reasonable
times in the normal course of business and one
which is designed to permit, where necessary,
armed and forceable intrusion at three o'clock in
the morning. In short, there is a difference in kind
between the tramp of jackboots and the sniff of the
inspector of drains.
In my view, there is clearly a category of public
health-and safety-related inspections carried out in
commercial or industrial premises where a war-
rantless search and seizure is not only reasonable
but essential for the protection of the public good.
This has been the view adopted in the United
States with respect to the provisions of the Fourth
Amendment, which admittedly are different from
those of section 8:
Donovan v. Dewey, 101 S. Ct. 2534 (1981), at 2538
However, unlike searches of private homes, which generally
must be conducted pursuant to a warrant in order to be
reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, legislative schemes
authorizing warrantless administrative searches of commercial
property do not necessarily violate the Fourth Amend
ment .... The greater latitude to conduct warrantless inspec
tions of commercial property reflects the fact that the expecta
tion of privacy that the owner of commercial property enjoys in
such property differs significantly from the sanctity accorded
an individual's home, and that this privacy interest may, in
certain circumstances, be adequately protected by regulatory
schemes authorizing warrantless inspections. (per Marshall J.)
This doctrine has found an echo in this country
even in the brief period of the Charter's existence:
R. v. Rao (1984), 12 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (Ont. C.A.), at 112
In my view, however, a clear distinction must be drawn between
a general power to enter private premises without a warrant to
search for contraband or evidence of crime and a power con
ferred on designated officials to enter premises for inspection
and audit purposes and to seize records, samples or products in
relation to business and activities subject to government regula
tion. (per Martin J.A.)
Re Belgoma Transportation Ltd. and Director of Employment
Standards (1985), 51 O.R. (2d) 509 (C.A.), at 512
The standards to be applied to the reasonableness of a search
or seizure and the necessity for a warrant with respect to
criminal investigations cannot be the same as those to be
applied to search or seizure within an administrative and
regulatory context. (per MacKinnon A.C.J.O.)
The evident purpose of the Plant Quarantine
Act is the protection of our forests and our farms
from infestation from parasites. The premises
where inspectors under the Act are likely to exer
cise their power of search and seizure will, in
virtually every case, be open to public view and, in
most cases, be either out-of-doors or in public
commercial premises. The nature of the things to
be searched is, by definition, plant material or
parasites, in which there can be no legitimate
expectation of privacy. The search must be con
ducted at a reasonable time and be based upon
reasonable belief; if it is not, the citizen has his
recourse at law.
Once, as a result of the search, plant material is
found to be infested and to constitute a hazard, the
public interest in its seizure and destruction forth
with must surely outweigh any interest whose pro
tection is envisaged by section 8 of the Charter.
All these things being considered, it is my view
that the quoted provisions of the statute do not
authorise an unreasonable search and seizure.
Plaintiff's other contentions with respect to sec
tions 7 and 15 of the Charter and paragraph 2(e)
of the Bill of Rights are wholly without merit.
There remains for consideration the somewhat
halfhearted suggestion by plaintiffs counsel, made
by him for the first time on appeal, that the action
might succeed as a claim for compensation on the
principle of the Manitoba Fisheries case. 5
As I read that case, such a claim would have to
be based upon a statutorily authorised taking by
the Crown without payment of compensation. In
my view, the facts to support such a claim are not
5 Manitoba Fisheries Ltd. v. The Queen, [1979] 1 S.C.R.
101.
pleaded; indeed the whole of plaintiff's statement
of claim seeks damages for illegal trespass to and
destruction of property, allegations completely at
variance to those required to support a Manitoba
Fisheries claim.
I would not, however, want to place my pro
posed disposition of this appeal solely upon my
view that the pleadings do not support a claim
based on Manitoba Fisheries, for I am further of
the opinion that, even if such a claim were proper
ly pleaded, it would have to be dismissed.
If I understand it correctly, the decision in the
Manitoba Fisheries case is rooted in a principle of
statutory construction: a presumption that Parlia
ment does not intend to deprive the citizen of his
lawfully held property without compensation. The
principle can only apply, therefore, where the
taking is authorised by statute for, if it is unautho
rised, the right to compensation flows from the
unlawfulness and not from any presumption of
parliamentary intention. It can also only apply
where the property is lawfully held. Leaving aside
all questions of title, where the property is of such
a nature that it cannot be lawfully possessed (as,
for example, in virtue of subsection 3(1) of the
Narcotic Control Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1]) there
can surely be no presumption of a legislative intent
to compensate for the deprivation of such
possession.
On the uncontested facts of the present case, the
property of which plaintiff claims to have been
deprived had been imported into this country. That
importation was conditional upon the property
passing inspection under the Plant Quarantine
Act. It did not do so. As a result, the possession of
the property in Canada became unlawful in
accordance with the terms of the Act and the
Regulations. The deprivation of such unlawful
possession can create no presumption of an intent
to compensate. To take a banal example, the tra
veller who returns from the United States and is
found to be carrying more liquor than is permitted
by law can surely make no claim for compensation
for the bottles which are confiscated and destroyed
at the border.
For these reasons and with due respect for the
contrary opinion, I conclude that the plaintiff's
action can no more be maintained on the basis of
the Manitoba Fisheries principle than it could on
the basis upon which it was originally pleaded.
In the result, I would allow the appeal, set aside
the judgment appealed from and dismiss the plain
tiff's action.
As to costs, counsel for the Crown indicated that
he did not seek them either here or below and I
would award none.
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.