Att. Gen. of Can. v. Inuit Tapirisat et al.
Court headnote
Att. Gen. of Can. v. Inuit Tapirisat et al. Collection Supreme Court Judgments Date 1980-10-07 Report [1980] 2 SCR 735 Judges Laskin, Bora; Martland, Ronald; Dickson, Robert George Brian; Beetz, Jean; Estey, Willard Zebedee; McIntyre, William Rogers; Chouinard, Julien On appeal from Federal Court of Appeal Subjects Administrative law Decision Content SUPREME COURT OF CANADA Att. Gen. of Can. v. Inuit Tapirisat et al., [1980] 2 S.C.R. 735 Date: 1980-10-07 The Attorney General of Canada (Defendant) Appellant; and Inuit Tapirisat of Canada and the National Anti-poverty Organization (Plaintiffs) Respondents. 1980: February 12; 1980: October 7. Present: Laskin C.J. and Martland, Dickson, Beetz, Estey, McIntyre and Chouinard JJ. ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL Administrative law — Decision of CRTC — Review by Governor in Council — Rules of natural justice and duty of fairness — Whether Governor in Council subject to judicial review — National Transportation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-17 as amended, s. 64 — Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. R-2 as amended, ss. 320, 321(l) — Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. 1-23, s. 28. After the approval by the CRTC of a new rate structure for Bell Canada, the plaintiffs-respondents appealed the CRTC decision to the Governor General in Council pursuant to s. 64(1) of the National Transportation Act. Their petitions having been denied, the respondents attacked the decisions of the Governor General in Council alleging that they had not been giv…
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Att. Gen. of Can. v. Inuit Tapirisat et al. Collection Supreme Court Judgments Date 1980-10-07 Report [1980] 2 SCR 735 Judges Laskin, Bora; Martland, Ronald; Dickson, Robert George Brian; Beetz, Jean; Estey, Willard Zebedee; McIntyre, William Rogers; Chouinard, Julien On appeal from Federal Court of Appeal Subjects Administrative law Decision Content SUPREME COURT OF CANADA Att. Gen. of Can. v. Inuit Tapirisat et al., [1980] 2 S.C.R. 735 Date: 1980-10-07 The Attorney General of Canada (Defendant) Appellant; and Inuit Tapirisat of Canada and the National Anti-poverty Organization (Plaintiffs) Respondents. 1980: February 12; 1980: October 7. Present: Laskin C.J. and Martland, Dickson, Beetz, Estey, McIntyre and Chouinard JJ. ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL Administrative law — Decision of CRTC — Review by Governor in Council — Rules of natural justice and duty of fairness — Whether Governor in Council subject to judicial review — National Transportation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-17 as amended, s. 64 — Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. R-2 as amended, ss. 320, 321(l) — Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. 1-23, s. 28. After the approval by the CRTC of a new rate structure for Bell Canada, the plaintiffs-respondents appealed the CRTC decision to the Governor General in Council pursuant to s. 64(1) of the National Transportation Act. Their petitions having been denied, the respondents attacked the decisions of the Governor General in Council alleging that they had not been given a hearing in accordance with the principles of natural justice. This appeal arises from an application made in the Trial Division of the Federal Court for an order striking out the plaintiffs' statement of claim on the ground that the statement disclosed "no reasonable cause of action". The application was granted but the Federal Court of Appeal set aside the order of the Trial Division judge. Hence the appeal to this Court. Held: The appeal should be allowed. The substance of the question before this Court in this appeal is whether there is a duty to observe natural justice in, or at least a duty of fairness incumbent on, the Governor in Council in dealing with parties such as the respondents upon their submission of a petition under s. 64(1) of the National Transportation Act. Such petitions are to be contrasted with the mechanism for appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal on questions of law or jurisdiction provided in subs. (2) and following of s. 64. The courts have held that the rules of natural justice and the duty to act fairly depend on the circumstances of the case, the nature of the inquiry or investigation, the subject matter that is being dealt with, the consequences on the persons affected and so forth. The mere fact that a decision is made pursuant to a statutory power vested in the Governor in Council does not mean that it is beyond review if the latter fails to observe a condition precedent to the exercise of that power, whether such power is classified as administrative or quasi-judicial. However in this case, there is no failure to observe a condition precedent but rather the attack is directed at procedures adopted by the Governor in Council, once validly seized of the respondents' petitions. The very nature of the Governor in Council must be taken into account in assessing the technique of review which he adopted. The executive branch cannot be deprived of the right to resort to its staff, departmental personnel and ministerial members concerned with the various policy issues raised by a petition. Under s. 64(1), the Governor in Council is not limited to varying orders made inter partes but he may act "of his motion"; he may act "at any time"; he may vary or rescind any order, decision, rule or regulation "in his discretion". Parliament has in s. 64(1) not burdened the Governor in Council with any standards or guidelines in the exercise of its rate review function. Nor were procedural standards imposed or even implied. The discretion of the Governor in Council is complete provided he observes the jurisdictional boundaries of s. 64(1). Furthermore there is no need for the Governor in Council to give reasons for his decision, to hold any kind of hearing, or even to acknowledge the receipt of a petition. Where the executive branch has been assigned a function performable in the past by the Legislature itself and where the res or subject matter is not an individual concern, considerations different from Nicholson v. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311, arise. In such a circumstance the Court must fall back upon the basic jurisdictional supervisory role and in so doing construe the statute to determine whether the Governor in Council has performed its functions within the boundary of the parliamentary grant and in accordance with the terms of the parliamentary mandate. Further, there is nothing in s. 64(1) to justify a variable yardstick for the application to that section of the principle of fairness according to the source of the information placed before the Governor in Council. Once the proper construction of the section is determined, it applies consistently throughout the proceedings before the Governor in Council. Ross v. Scottish Union and National Insurance Co. (1920), 47 O.L.R. 308; Wiseman v. Borneman, [1971] A.C. 297; Pearlberg v. Varty, [1972] 1 W.L.R. 534; Russell v. Duke of Norfolk, [1949] 1 All E.R. 109; Selvarajan v. Race Relations Board, [1976] 1 All E.R. 12; Border Cities Press Club v. Attorney General for Ontario, [1955] 1 D.L.R. 404; Martineau v. Matsqui Institution (No. 2), [1980] I S.C.R. 602; Re Davisville Investment Co. Ltd. and City of Toronto et al. (1977), 15 O.R. (2d) 553; Alliance des Professeurs Catholiques de Montréal v. Commission des Relations Ouvrières de la Province de Québec, [1953] 2 S.C.R. 140; Bates v. Lord Hailsham, [1972] 1 W.L.R. 1373; Essex County Council v. Minister of Housing (1967), 66 L.G.R. 23, referred to; Nicholson v. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311, considered. APPEAL from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal[1], setting aside the order of the Trial Division. Appeal allowed and order of the Trial Division restored. E. A. Bowie, and H. L. Molot, for the defendant, appellant. B. A. Crane, Q.C., and Andrew J. Roman, for the plaintiffs, respondents. The judgment of the Court was delivered by ESTEY J.—This appeal relates to the proper disposition of an application made in the Trial Division of the Federal Court of Canada for an order pursuant to the rules of that Court striking out the statement of claim and dismissing this action on the grounds that the statement of claim discloses "no reasonable cause of action". Mr. Justice Marceau of the Trial Division of the Federal Court allowed the application, struck out the statement of claim, and dismissed the action. The Federal Court of Appeal set aside the order of the Trial Division although in doing so found that there was no basis for the relief sought in the statement of claim except with regard to one issue to which I will make reference later. The effect, therefore, of the disposition below is that if left undisturbed, the matter would go to trial on the basis of the pleadings as they now stand. A brief outline of events leading up to these proceedings will be helpful. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (herein for brevity referred to as the CRTC), in response to an application from Bell Canada, conducted lengthy hearings concerning a proposed increase in telephone rates to be charged to subscribers in the provinces of Ontario and Quebec and in the Northwest Territories. The plaintiffs/ respondents participated in these hearings as intervenants throughout. In conducting these proceedings, the CRTC was proceeding under authority provided in the Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. R-2 as amended, the National Transportation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-17 as amended, and the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission Act, S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 49. We are not here concerned with the actual proceedings before the CRTC. The balance of the narrative can best be set out by quoting from the statement of claim which, because this is an application for dismissal, must be taken as proved. 5. On June 1st, 1977 the CRTC issued its decision in the matter, which decision denied some of the relief sought by each of the plaintiffs. 6. On June 10th, 1977 ITC [a respondent herein] appealed the decision of the CRTC to the Governor-in-Council pursuant to section 64 of the National Transportation Act, requesting the Governor-in-Council to set aside the relevant portion of the decision of the CRTC and to substitute its own order therefor. On June 29th, 1977 Bell Canada issued a reply thereto. While ITC was preparing its final reply to the reply of Bell Canada, the Governor-in-Council decided the appeal adversely to ITC. On July 14th, 1977 Order-in-Council P.C. 1977-2027 was made. ITC's final reply was never submitted. 7. On June 9th, 1977 NAPO [a respondent herein] also appealed the decision of the CRTC to the Governor-in-Council pursuant to section 64 of the National Transportation Act, to which Bell Canada prepared a reply dated June 29th, 1977. The Governor-in-Council decided this appeal adversely to NAPO without waiting to receive the final reply of NAPO. On July 14th, 1977 Order-in-Council P.C. 1977-2026 was made. NAPO's final reply was never submitted. 8. In arriving at its decision the Governor-in-Council, following customary practice, allowed no oral presentation but conducted the hearing entirely in writing. However, following the usual practice, the actual written submissions of the parties were not presented to the members of the Governor-in-Council but rather, evidence and opinions were obtained from officials of the Department of Communications as to: a) What that Department thought were the positions of the parties in the appeal; b) The position of the Department, or certain officials thereof, in relation to the facts and issues in the appeal; c) Whether either or both of the appeals should be allowed. None of this evidence or these opinions have ever been communicated to the appellants (plaintiffs herein). 9. The CRTC was requested by the Governor-in-Council to submit its views as to the disposition of the appeals. These views of the CRTC were neither made available to the appellants (plaintiffs herein) by the CRTC itself, nor by the Governor-in-Council. 10. The Minister of Communications, at the meeting of the Governor-in-Council at which the appeals were decided, both participated in the making of the decisions and submitted to the meeting her recommendation that the decision be that the appeals be disallowed, together with evidence and argument in support of this recommendation. The submissions of the Minister were a conduit for, were based upon, or at least included evidence, opinions and recommendations from the CRTC and from officials of her Department. Neither the con-tent of these opinions and recommendations nor of any evidence or argument submitted in support thereof has ever been communicated to the appellants (plaintiffs herein), and hence the plaintiffs have been denied an opportunity to make a reply thereto; yet the two decisions and the resultant Orders-in-Council were made on the basis of the submissions of the Minister. 11. The plaintiffs submit that the defendant Governor-in-Council, when deciding a matter on a petition pursuant to section 64 of the National Transportation Act, is a Federal Board, Commission or other tribunal within the meaning of section 18 of the Federal Court Act. 12. The plaintiffs submit that the defendant Governor-in-Council was required to decide these appeals himself and to reach these decisions by means of a procedure which is fair and in accordance with the principles of natural justice. 13. The plaintiffs submit that in the circumstances, the Governor-in-Council held no hearing in any meaningful sense of that word, and that, therefore, the decisions and Orders-in-Council made pursuant to them are nullities. Alternatively, it is submitted that if there was a hearing, the procedure employed did not result in a fair hearing, hence the decisions and orders resulting are nullities. 14. Accordingly, the plaintiffs pray for the following relief: *i) ii) In the alternative, a declaration that the procedure employed by the Governor-in-Council in these two appeals resulted in: a) no hearing having been held, or in the alternative, b) such hearing as was held was not a full and fair hearing, in accordance with the principles of natural justice. iii) Such other relief as the Court deems proper. * This paragraph being a prayer for issuance of writ of certiorari was omitted as the respondents, after the judgment of the court of first instance was issued, no longer advanced this claim. We are now concerned only with para. 14(ii) of the prayer for relief in which a declaration is sought. Paragraph 14(ii) does not, of course, when read literally, frame a proper request for declaration. There is no declaration sought with reference to any rights or obligations allegedly arising in the parties to the proceeding. The declaration is with reference to a failure to hold a hearing, or, in any case, "a full and fair hearing" without reference to any statutory or other right or duty relating to the parties. The declaration sought should have related to the inferentially alleged invalidity of the two Orders-in-Council issued by the Governor-in-Council in response to the petition of the respondents, and I proceed to dispose of this appeal on the basis that the prayer for relief was so framed. As I have said, all the facts pleaded in the statement of claim must be deemed to have been proven. On a motion such as this a court should, of course, dismiss the action or strike out any claim made by the plaintiff only in plain and obvious cases and where the court is satisfied that "the case is beyond doubt"; Ross v. Scottish Union and National Insurance Co.[2] Here Bell Canada in its statement of defence has raised the issue of law as to the position of the Governor in Council when acting under s. 64 of the National Transportation Act, supra, and the power and jurisdiction of the court in relation thereto. The issue so raised requires for its disposition neither additional pleadings nor any evidence. I therefore agree with respect with the judge of first instance that it is a proper occasion for a court to respond in the opening stages of the action to such an issue as this application raises. The defendants other than Bell Canada comprise the occupant of the office of the Governor General of Canada at the time of the commencement of these proceedings and the then members of the federal Cabinet, collectively described in the style of cause as the Governor in Council. I note that the term is defined in the Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-23, s. 28 in the following way: "Governor in Council", or "Governor General in Council" means the Governor General of Canada, or person administering the Government of Canada for the time being, acting by and with the advice of, or by and with the advice and consent of, or in conjunction with the Queen's Privy Council for Canada. The more traditional procedure has been to join only the Attorney General of Canada as a party representing the Governor in Council. Exception was taken to the particular procedure in the motion for dismissal but the learned trial judge did not find it necessary to refer to the matter because he dismissed the action; and the Federal Court of Appeal did not deal with it. Because of the disposition I shall propose, the matter does not require an answer to the second request in the appellant's application wherein the applicant asks that the claim be struck out as against all named defend-ants other than the Attorney General of Canada. The CRTC proceedings concerned the application by Bell Canada for approval under s. 320 of the Railway Act, supra, of those telephone tolls proposed to be charged by Bell Canada for its services in areas including the Northwest Territories. Section 321(1) of the Railway Act, supra, requires that "all tolls shall be just and reasonable ...". Subsection (2) prohibits "unjust discrimination" and subs. (3) authorizes the CRTC to determine "as a question of fact" whether or not there has been unjust discrimination or unreasonable preference. The National Transportation Act, supra, makes further provision for such hearings by the CRTC and for appeals therefrom; and we are here principally concerned with s. 64 of that statute, as amended by R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 65 (Schedule II, Item 32). It provides as follows: 64. (1) The Governor in Council may at any time, in his discretion, either upon petition of any party, person or company interested, or of his own motion, and with-out any petition or application, vary or rescind any order, decision, rule or regulation of the Commission, whether such order or decision is made inter partes or otherwise, and whether such regulation is general or limited in its scope and application; and any order that the Governor in Council may make with respect thereto is binding upon the Commission and upon all parties. (2) An appeal lies from the Commission to the Federal Court of Appeal upon a question of law, or a question of jurisdiction, upon leave therefor being obtained from that Court upon application made within one month after the making of the order, decision, rule or regulation sought to be appealed from or within such further time as a judge of that Court under special circumstances allows, and upon notice to the parties and the Commission, and upon hearing such of them as appear and desire to be heard; and the costs of such application are in the discretion of that Court. The foregoing statutes were enacted at a time when the approval of telephone tariffs was a function of the Canadian Transport Commission and its predecessors. By the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission Act, supra, ss. 14, 17 and Schedule Items 2 and 5, the CRTC was assigned these responsibilities with reference to telephones and telegraphs. The two respondent organizations participated "actively throughout the hearing" (to quote from the statement of claim) in the Bell Canada application "to increase the rates charged to customers". Not being satisfied with the decision of the CRTC, the two respondents had the alternative of appealing to the Federal Court of Appeal on a question of law or jurisdiction (s. 64(2), supra) or of filing a petition with the Governor in Council "to set aside the relevant portion of the decision of the CRTC and to substitute its own order therefor" (to quote from para. 6 of the statement of claim). The respondents elected to follow the latter course. The record does not reveal the contents of the respondents' petition and arguments, if any, in support of their application to the Governor in Council. Paragraph 10 of the claim asserts, and I treat it for the purposes of these proceedings as factually correct, that the Governor in Council received recommendations from the Minister of Communications, together with evidence and argument in support; evidence, opinions, and recommendations from the CRTC; reports from officials of the Department of Communications; and the reply of Bell Canada to each of the respondents' petitions. The respondents did not receive from the Governor in Council the contents of the recommendations and the material described in para. 10 of the claim, supra, but apparently did receive a copy of the Bell Canada reply to the petition. The Governor in Council denied the petitions of the respondents before the respondents had filed their respective responses to Bell Canada. According to the allegations made in the statement of claim, the Governor in Council did not communicate to the respondents the substance of the material received from the Minister and other sources mentioned above and did not invite and consequently did not receive the respondents' comments on such material. No oral hearing occurred in the sense of a session at which the Governor in Council heard the petitioners and the various respondents, and indeed the respondents do not insist that such a procedure is prescribed by law and do not now press for an 'oral' hearing. Before this Court the respondents' position was principally founded on the failure of the Governor in Council (a) to receive the actual petitions of the respondents and (b) to afford the respondents the opportunity to respond to the case made against them by the Minister, the departmental officials and the CRTC. To a much lesser extent the respondents objected to the lack of opportunity to answer the response by Bell Canada to the petitions, presumably because the respondents had already encountered at length the arguments and submissions of Bell Canada during the CRTC hearings and had no doubt anticipated Bell Canada's position in their respective petitions to the Governor in Council. In support of these objections to the course followed by the Governor in Council the respondents submit: (a) that the Governor in Council acting under s. 64 is a quasi-judicial body or at least owes the respondents a duty of fairness; (b) the duty includes disclosure to the respondent of submissions received from the CRTC; (c) the respondents have the right to answer Bell Canada if it has introduced some new aspect or submission; (d) the very minimum requirement is that the actual written submissions of the petitioners (respondents) must be placed before the Council and not a summary thereof prepared by officials; (e) the Governor in Council is required by s. 64 to give notice to all "parties" even if it moves on its own initiative (as the subsection authorizes it to do) so as to give prior notice to all those who may be affected by the rules to be established by the Governor in Council. I turn then to the wording of s. 64 itself. This provision finds its roots in the Railway Act, 1868, 31 Vict., c. 68, subss. 12(9) and 12(10), which gave to the Governor in Council the power to approve rates and tariffs for the haulage of freight by rail. In 1903 the task was given to the Board of Railway Commissioners. Section 64 assumed its present form in the Railway Act, 1903, 3 Edw. VII, c. 58, s. 44. All these statutes related to railway rates in the first instance and eventually were extended to cover telephone and telegraph rates. In the meantime provision had been made for telephone rates and charges in the private statutes of incorporation of the Bell Telephone Company of Canada, for example the 1892 Bell Telephone Company of Canada Act, 55-56 Vict., c. 67, s. 3: The existing rates shall not be increased without the consent of the Governor in Council. In its present state, s. 64 creates a right of appeal on questions of "law or jurisdiction" to the Federal Court of Appeal and an unlimited or unconditional right to petition the Governor in Council to "vary or rescind" any "order, decision, rule or regulation" of the Commission. These avenues of review by their terms are quite different. The Governor in Council may vary any such order on his own initiative. The power is not limited to an order of the Commission but extends to its rules or regulations. The review by the Governor in Council is not limited to an order made by the Commission inter partes or to an order limited in scope. It is to be noted at once that following the grant of the right of appeal to the Court in subs. (2), there are five subsections dealing with the details of an appeal to the Court. There can be found in s. 64 nothing to qualify the freedom of action of the Governor in Council, or indeed any guidelines, procedural or substantive, for the exercise of its functions under subs. (I). The substance of the question before this Court in this appeal is this: is there a duty to observe natural justice in, or at least a lesser duty of fairness incumbent on, the Governor in Council in dealing with parties such as the respondents upon their submission of a petition under s. 64(1)? It will be convenient first to consider briefly the nature of the duty to be fair in our law. It has been said by Lord Reid in Wiseman v. Borneman[3], at p. 308: Natural justice requires that the procedures before any tribunal which is acting judicially shall be fair in all the circumstances. Such a broad statement depends for its validity upon the meaning to be ascribed to "any tribunal", and to the terms of its parent statute. This Court was concerned with such matters in Nicholson v. Haldimand- Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police and the Attorney General for Ontario[4]. A probationary constable was dismissed without being told why his services were being dispensed with and without being given an opportunity to respond or to defend his position. In the result the majority decision of this Court required in those circumstances that the probationary constable should have been treated fairly, not arbitrarily, even though he was not entitled to all the procedural protection accorded to a full constable. The Chief Justice writing for the majority stated at p. 325: What rightly lies behind this emergence is the realization that the classification of statutory functions as judicial, quasi-judicial or administrative is often very difficult, to say the least; and to endow some with procedural protection while denying others any at all would work injustice when the results of statutory decisions raise the same serious consequences for those adversely affected, regardless of the classification of the function in question. The essence of the decision is found in the Chief Justice's remarks at p. 328: In my opinion, the appellant should have been told why his services were no longer required and given an opportunity, whether orally or in writing as the Board might determine, to respond. The Board itself, I would think, would wish to be certain that it had not made a mistake in some fact or circumstance which it deemed relevant to its determination. Once it had the appellant's response, it would be for the Board to decide on what action to take, without its decision being reviewable elsewhere, always premising good faith. Such a course provides fairness to the appellant, and it is fair as well to the Board's right, as a public authority to decide, once it had the appellant's response, whether a person in his position should be allowed to continue in office to the point where his right to procedural protection was enlarged. Status in office deserves this minimal protection, however brief the period for which the office is held. The House of Lords in the earlier decision of Pearlberg v. Varty[5], had in effect found a presumption that the rules of natural justice apply to a tribunal entrusted with judicial or quasi-judicial functions but that no such presumption arises where the body is charged with administrative or executive functions. In the latter case courts will act on the presumption that Parliament had not intended to act unfairly and will "in suitable cases" imply an obligation in the body or person to act with fairness. See Lord Pearson at p. 547. Lord Hailsham L.C., combining the idea of fairness and natural justice, put it this way at p. 540: The doctrine of natural justice has come in for increasing consideration in recent years and the courts generally, and your Lordships' House in particular, have, I think rightly, advanced its frontiers considerably. But at the same time they have taken an increasingly sophisticated view of what it requires in individual cases. Tucker L.J., thirty years earlier, came closer to our situation in this appeal when he said in Russell v. Duke of Norfolk[6], at p. 118: The requirements of natural justice must depend on the circumstances of the case, the nature of the inquiry, the rules under which the tribunal is acting, the subject-matter that is being dealt with, and so forth. Accordingly, I do not derive much assistance from the definitions of natural justice which have been from time to time used, but whatever standard is adopted, one essential is that the person concerned should have a reasonable opportunity of presenting his case. The arena in which the broad rules of natural justice arose and the even broader rule of fairness now performs is described by Lord Denning M.R. in Selvarajan v. Race Relations Board[7] where His Lordship, after enumerating a number of authorities dealing with tribunals generally concerned with a lis inter partes in a variety of administrative fields, said at p. 19: In all these cases it has been held that the investigating body is under a duty to act fairly; but that which fairness requires depends on the nature of the investigation and the consequences which it may have on persons affected by it. The fundamental rule is that, if a person may be subjected to pains or penalties, or be exposed to prosecution or proceedings or deprived of remedies or redress, or in some such way adversely affected by the investigation and report, then he should be told the case made against him and be afforded a fair opportunity of answering it. (Even in those instances the Court went on to add that such a body may adopt its own procedure, can employ staff for all preliminary work, but in the end must come to its own decision.) Let it be said at the outset that the mere fact that a statutory power is vested in the Governor in Council does not mean that it is beyond review. If that body has failed to observe a condition precedent to the exercise of that power, the court can declare that such purported exercise is a nullity. In Wilson v. Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway Company[8], for example, the Privy Council considered the position of the Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia under the Vancouver Island Settlers' Rights Act, 1904, Amendment Act, 1917, S.B.C. 1917, c. 71. The effectiveness of a Crown land grant issued by order of the Lieutenant-Governor in Council was contested on the grounds that the Lieutenant-Governor in Council had no "reasonable proof" before them that the grantees had improved the lands in question or occupied them with an intention to reside thereon. The Court of Appeal found that there was no such evidence and hence declared the Order in Council to be void. The Privy Council proceeded on the basis that before the Lieutenant-Governor in Council could make the grant in question, it must determine that the statutorily prescribed conditions had been met by the applicant for the grant. As here, the allegation was made that the owners did not have "an adequate opportunity" to show that there was no factual foundation for the grant made by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council. The Privy Council found against this submission stating at p. 213 through Duff J., sitting as a member of the Board: The respondents were given the fullest opportunity to present before the Lieutenant-Governor in Council everything they might to urge against the view that the depositions produced in themselves constituted "reasonable proof," and they had the fullest opportunity also of supporting their contention that the depositions alone, in the absence of cross-examination, ought not to be considered sufficient, and that further time should be allowed to enable them to prepare their case. The appointed authority for dealing with the matter, it must be remembered, was the Executive Government of the Province directly answerable to the Legislature, and their Lordships agree without hesitation with the majority of the Court of Appeal in holding as they explicitly decided upon the same facts in Dunlop's case, that the Lieutenant-Governor in Council was not bound to govern himself by the rules of procedure regulating proceedings in a Court of justice. It cannot be suggested that he proceeded without any regard to the rights of the respondents and the procedure followed must be presumed, in the absence of some conclusive reason to the contrary, to have been adopted in exercise of his discretion under the statute as a proper mode of discharging the duty entrusted to him. His decisions taken in the exercise of that discretion are, in their Lordships' opinion, final and not reviewable in legal proceedings. The Privy Council also determined in the case that factual issues, including the "reasonableness" or "sufficiency" of the evidence, were exclusively for the Lieutenant-Governor whose decision would not be reviewable by a court if there was "some evidence in support of the application" (per Duff J. at p. 213). The Ontario Court of Appeal was concerned with similar issues in Border Cities Press Club v. Attorney General for Ontario[9]. The factual differences are such that it affords no direct assistance here. The statute prescribed conditions precedent to the exercise of the powers granted by the Legislature to the Lieutenant-Governor in Council in that "sufficient cause must be shown" before the letters patent in question might be cancelled. The trial court found that an unreasonable request had been made to the applicant by the province, no hearing or opportunity was afforded the applicant, and indeed no notice of the impending cancellation of the charter was given by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council. The Court of Appeal set aside the declaration that the Order in Council was void for procedural reasons applicable to the powers of the court of the first instance and for reasons not here relevant, but in doing so stated through Pickup C.J.O. at p. 412: I agree with the learned Judge in Weekly Court, for the reasons stated by him, that the power conferred is conditional upon sufficient cause being shown, and that without giving the respondent an opportunity of being heard, or an opportunity to show cause why the letters patent should not be forfeited, the Lieutenant-Governor in Council would not have jurisdiction under the statute to make the order complained of. In exercising the power referred to, the Lieutenant-Governor in Council is not, in my opinion, exercising a prerogative of the Crown, but a power conferred by statute, and such a statutory power can be validly exercised only by complying with statutory provisions which are, by law, conditions precedent to the exercise of such power. It may be of interest to note that in approving the observations of the court below with respect to the statutory powers granted to the Lieutenant-Governor in Council, no express approval was given to the comment by the learned Judge in Weelky Court that in performing his function under the statute the Lieutenant-Governor in Council was required to act judicially. However, no failure to observe a condition precedent is alleged here. Rather it is contended that, once validly seized of the respondents' petition, the Governor in Council did not fulfill the duty to be fair implicitly imposed upon him, the argument goes, by s. 64(1) of the National Transportation Act. While, after Nicholson, supra, and Martineau v. Matsqui Institution (No. 2)[10], (decision of this Court handed down December 13, 1979) the existence of such a duty no longer depends on classifying the power involved as "administrative" or "quasi-judicial", it is still necessary to examine closely the statutory provision in question in order to discern whether it makes the decision-maker subject to any rules of procedural fairness. Instructive in this regard is the decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal in Re Davisville Investment Co. Ltd. and City of Toronto et al.[11], where judicial review of an Order in Council was sought. The applicant had unsuccessfully applied to the Ontario Municipal Board for review of an earlier Board decision. By petition the applicant sought to have the Lieutenant-Governor in Council rescind the earlier Board order and direct a public hearing by the Board "to correct the earlier denial thereof" by the Board. The statute under which the petition was filed provided that the Lieutenant-Governor in Council might confirm, vary or rescind the Board order or require the Board to hold a new hearing. Lacourcière J.A. speaking on behalf of the majority, after describing the alternative provision for appeal to the court on a question of law or jurisdiction, described the petition as "the political route to the Lieutenant-Governor in Council" and went on to state at pp. 555-56: The petition does not constitute a judicial appeal or review. It merely provides a mechanism for a control by the executive branch of Government applying its perception of the public interest to the facts established before the Board, plus the additional facts before the Council. The Lieutenant-Governor in Council. is not concerned with matters of law and jurisdiction which are within the ambit of judicial control. But it can do what Courts will not do, namely, it can substitute its opinion on a matter of public convenience and general policy in the public interest. This is what was done by the Order in Council: if it was done without any error of law, or without defects of a jurisdictional nature, the Divisional Court had no power to interfere and properly dismissed the application before it. At p. 557 His Lordship returns to the same point: Section 94 of The Ontario Municipal Board Act should not be construed restrictively as if it involved an inferior tribunal to which certain matters have been committed by the Legislature. I prefer to regard the power as one reserved by the legislative to the executive branch of Government acting on broad lines of policy. There is no reason to fetter and restrict the scope of the power by a narrow judicial interpretation. In the Davisville proceeding the petition was treated as an appeal in writing and it may be noted that the respondent party filed a reply but no response thereto was made by the applicant. Blair J.A. dissented on the interpretation to be placed upon s. 94 as it related to the alternative courses open on such a petition to the Lieutenant-Governor in Council, but agreed with the majority of the court that the action of the Executive is reviewable only if the Lieutenant-Governor in Council acts outside the terms of the enabling statute. It is not helpful in my view to attempt to classify the action or function by the Governor in Council (or indeed the Lieutenant-Governor in Council acting in similar circumstances) into one of the traditional categories established in the development of administrative law. The Privy Council in the Wilson case, supra, described the function of the Lieutenant-Governor as "judicial" as did the judge of first instance in the Border Cities Press proceedings, supra. However, in my view the essence of the principle of law here operating is simply that in the exercise of a statutory power the Governor in Council, like any other person or group of persons, must keep within the law as laid down by Parliament or the Legislature. Failure to do so will call into action the supervising function of the superior court whose responsibility is to enforce the law, that is to ensure that such actions as may be authorized by statute shall be carried out in accordance with its terms, or that a public authority shall not fail to respond to a duty assigned to it by statute. I turn now to a consideration of s. 64(1) in light of those principles. Clearly the Governor in Council is not limited to varying orders made inter partes where a lis existed and was determined by the Commission. The Commission is empowered by s. 321 of the Railway Act, supra, and the section of the CRTC Act already noted to approve all charges for the use of telephones of Bell Canada. In so doing the Commission d
Source: decisions.scc-csc.ca