Particularly in employment cases 111
Primary distress suffered by an employee is caused by an employer exercising their contractual rights. The breach of K, if any, arises solely from the way the employer exercises those rights. Usually it’s because the employer fails to properly calculate the notice period. 111
The loss of notice is generally not the reason for the mental distress. Have to establish a causal connection between a breach and the distress suffered. 111
Exceptions to the General Rule: Situations in Which Courts WILL Award Non-Pecuniary Damages 111
1. Where Breach of K Causes Significant Physical Inconvenience 111
To some extent, this is an expansion on the usual tort idea. If you’re physically injured, you can have damages. 111
For a long time, courts have allowed a slightly wider scope of stress and physical inconvenience. 111
Hobbs v. Southeastern Railway [1875] 112
Facts: Train stopped early, had to get off and walk 10 miles in the rain. Significant physical discomfort as a result of the breach of K. 112
Held: court awarded monetary damages for the physical inconvenience. 112
Warton [BCCA] 112
Follows Hobbes 112
Facts: bought a Cadillac, but it made a buzzing noise. Kept trying and failing to fix it. 112
Held: Compensated for the breach and the distressing buzzing, as well as for inconvenience of repeatedly taking the car in to the dealer to have it fixed. 112
Comments: probably the fancy nature of the car enhanced the foreseeability of the buzzing being a problem for . 112
2. Psychological Deliverables 112
Where the purpose of the K is to deliver a non-economic benefit, which is not delivered. 112
Brings the question back to a consumer surplus analysis. 112
Recall Wilson v. Sooter: central to the K for wedding photos was a promise to deliver an intangible benefit (wedding memories etc.) 112
Jarvis v. Swan Tours [1972, Eng. CA] 112
Lord Denning 112
Facts: disappointed vacationer sues for loss of enjoyment of vacation. ∆ offers to reimburse payment, but claims above that. 112
Held: the compensation/expectation principle requires more than just reimbursement, because he expected the psychological benefit of a vacation. 112
Farley v. Skinner [2002, HL] 112
Facts: argues house is worth less than it should be, due to airplane noise. Sues ∆ surveyor for damages. 112
Held: no compensation for economic difference in value, but psychological deliverable is compensable - $10k. 112
Reasons: 112
Airplane noise was there when he bought the house. 112
Note: in the market, even if can prove he would have bargained for a lower price, the owner would have sold it to someone else at the market price. 112
No economic loss in this case. So, the only loss he can get would be disappointment/mental distress. 112
Psychological deliverable: specifically negotiated w/ surveyor for the information on airplane noise, which made it specifically deliverable as part of the K. 112
Goes beyond previous cases: object of K no longer has to be primarily a psychological deliverable it can be a secondary aspect of the K. 113
Court gives $10k, and says that’s the top end of an award of this type. 113
Fidler v. Sun Life [2006, SCC] 113
Facts: Disability payments should have been made, had to go to court to get them. Claimed damages for mental distress. 113
Held: $20k awarded. 113
Reasons: 113
Subtext/secondary purpose of insurance Ks is peace of mind. 113
Not just to protect against the financial risk, but so you don’t have to worry about that risk in the meantime. 113
Psychological benefit of having peace of mind while the K is in place. 113
Basically adopts Hadley v. Baxendale foreseeability requirements for determining whether psychological harm is compensable. 113
But, to apply the foreseeability rule, you look at the object of the K/what was promised. so, it’s not really a huge step forward. 113
Comments: note that the award is roughly equivalent to that in Farley still relatively modest. 113
And it was supported by medical evidence in this case. 113
It’s not just about missing the psychological security of having an insurance K, but getting more sick by having to live without disability benefits. 113
Aggravated Damages 113
Can mean ambiguously one of two things: 113
1. Damages over and above your pecuniary damages aggravated in the sense that they are more than pecuniary. 113
2. Damages where the loss is greater than it otherwise would have been because of aggravating behaviour by the ∆ 113
Most common in wrongful dismissal cases, where damages are caused by aggravating behaviour. E.g. not only did employer fail to give notice, but abused employee on the way out. 113
Turczinski v. Dupont Heating and Air Conditioning [2004, ONCA] 113
Facts 113
Heating contractor didn’t do the job right. 113
All parties agreed that it cost $10k to fix the problem/clean up the mess. 113
But also claimed loss of rent for three years, and mental distress. Argues special negotiations. 113
Had previously undiagnosed depression, bi-polar disorder, OCD the experience w/ the heating contractor triggered an episode that lasted for three years. 113
Held: no mental distress award. Lost rent for 1 year awarded as reasonable mitigation period. 113
Reasons 114
Mental distress claim rejected: 114
∆ didn’t have special knowledge to the threshold necessary to put them on notice. may not have fully known, as it was undiagnosed at the time. 114
Policy: fairness. Unfair to hold a heating contractor to that level of risk in entering into Ks with customers. 114
Policy: economic efficiency people should be able to conduct business on the basis of some settled expectations of what their risk will be. 114
Policy: don’t want contractors to avoid dealing with people who have disabilities due to added risk 114
Lost rent: 114
Normally, would expect a person in this situation to mitigate within one year, so that’s the amount given. 114
She couldn’t mitigate, but the court says that risk shouldn’t be borne by ∆. 114
Having a psychological thin skull is not an excuse for failure to mitigate in a contract context. 114
Note: in tort, pre-existing thin skull condition will make ∆ responsible if fails to mitigate. 114
Rationale: in tort, hasn’t agreed to deal with ∆, and needs more protection as a result. 114
Wallace v. United Grain Growers [1997, SCC] 114
Unless there is an independently actionable wrong, we don’t award damages for mental distress. 114
Breach of an obligation of good faith allows court not to award damages for mental distress, but to “bump up” the notice period. 114
Since Wallace, courts have said: 114
1. No damages without IAW 114
2. Obligation of good faith in employment contracts. No damages for mental distress as a result of breach, but increased notice period available. 114
It really looks like they’re compensating mental distress under the cover of increased notice. 114
Honda v. Keays [2010, SCC] 114
Main effect: we no longer call Wallace damages an ‘extended notice period’. 114
Damages will be awarded not through an arbitrary extension of the notice period, but through an assessment of the actual damages arising from the wrongful act. 114
Bringing employment Ks into conformity with the Fidler model: where a component of the K clearly promises a benefit, can add to damages, measured in the ordinary way. 114
Fidler said IAW ≠ required; Honda reaffirmed this. 114
Hadley v. Baxendale principle: all recoverable where reasonably foreseeable. BUT, you still need something in the K that makes it foreseeable – e.g. peace of mind Ks, etc. 115
Reliance Damages 115
General 115
Conceptual basis: status quo ante 115
Designed to put you in the position you would have been in, had you never entered into the K in the first place. 115
Reliance is the standard measure in negligence law (misrepresentation), and an alternative measure in K law 115
Reliance damages ARE available: 115
Where there is no reasonable expectation reliance is used as the maximum claim in contract [see e.g. Esso v. Marden] 115
When expectation damages are difficult to prove reliance may be available as an alternative. [see e.g. McRae v. Commonwealth Disposals, Anglia v. Reed] 115
Reliance damages ARE NOT available: 115
When there are no expectation damages, or where reliance would give a larger award than they would get with expectation damages cannot put in a better position than if the K had been performed [see Bowlay Logging] 115
Where expectation damages are calculable, they are the ceiling. can’t put self in better position by claiming reliance instead of expectation damages. 115
To award reliance damages in excess of expectation would unsettle the allocation of risk b/w the parties 115
Where Expected Profits are Not Determinable: 115
Courts will assume at least a break-even scenario, and the onus is on ∆ to disprove this. [Sunshine Vacations v. Hudson’s Bay Company] 116
Where we don’t know what the outcome of a K would have been, we’ll at least assume that venture would have broken even (i.e. earned enough gross revenue to cover the expenditures under the K.) 116
Then the onus shifts to ∆ to prove that would have lost money on the K [so that Bowlay Logging applies] 116
Note: problem in Sunshine Vacations: 116
CA said you can’t have lost profits and wasted expenditures, because that’s double compensation. This is true only if lost profits means gross profits, because if it’s net then the expenses have already been factored in and thus would not be compensated twice. 116
HOWEVER: There was $120k in expenses, and trial judge said would have made $100k in profit. 116
If the $100k profit is net profit, there’s no overlap and the should get both. 116
If profit is gross profit, and therefore double compensation (as stated by the court), then wouldn’t the presumption of breaking even be rebutted? 116
Misc Rules on Reliance Damages 116
Courts may award lost opportunity amounts in reliance damages [see e.g. Esso v. Marden] 116
Court characterized ’s lost profits as reliance damages: if he had not invested in the gas station, he would have gotten a different job/source of income. So, he was entitled to his opportunity costs the amount he would have earned had he never entered into the K. 116
Note: reliance damages may also include amounts thrown away trying to make the K work. These attempts to mitigate are a legitimate inclusion in wasted expenditures, but they are capped by reasonableness. 116
Reliance Damages for Negligent Misrepresentation 116
Reliance is the standard measure in negligent misrepresentation cases 116
Negligent Misrepresentation Damages: Requirements (Hedley Byrne Principle) 116
1. Duty of care must be an obligation in the relationship, or an undertaking of responsibility 116
2. Breach of that duty statement made without taking due care 117
3. Statement is untrue 117
4. relies on the statement to his/her detriment 117
5. Reliance is reasonable 117
In context – e.g. correlative expertise between parties. 117
Application 117
Applies in pure tort cases, and also in contract cases. 117
The basis of damages is the difference between a promise/guarantee and a negligent statement reliance, rather than expectation 117
SCC in BG Checo: 117
“[T]he main reason to expect a difference between tort and contract damages is the exclusion of the bargain elements in standard tort compensation.” 117
This is why K law defaults to expectation damages and tort defaults to reliance. 117
Beaver Lumber v. McLenaghan 117
Facts: 117
bought prefab house from ∆, who recommended a third party to construct it. 117
Turns out that guy had never assembled a prefab home before, and it was a disaster. 117
Had things worked out as hoped, would have had a house worth $37,709; actual value: $17,000. 117
Expenses: $21,400 for land and materials; $3200 to ∆. 117
Projected position = $13,109 profit; actual position = $7600 shortfall. 117
So sued for the expectation damages of $20,709. 117
Held: reliance damages are the appropriate measure. 117
Reasons 117
Shouldn’t treat the suggestion as a guarantee, just a careless statement. So, gets back the wasted money and is put in a break-even position. Status quo ante. 117
∆ induced to enter the K, didn’t breach a term of their K. So, court puts him in pos’n as if ≠ entered K. 117
VK Mason v. Bank of Nova Scotia [SCC] 117
Facts 117
Negligent misrepresentation re financing. Bank tells builder everything is fine and project is properly financed. 117
Builder doesn’t get paid. 117
claimed for lost cost of doing the building, and the amount still owing on the K. 117
TJ awarded both the lost expenditures and lost NET profit (so no double compensation problem) 117
Issue: But can only get reliance damages, per Beaver Lumber and other cases? 117
Held: Trial judge award upheld. 118
Court says they aren’t awarding lost profit on the K awarding opportunity costs (following Esso v. Marden) 118
But...they gave actual profit for this job, not some other job. 118
It’s a -favourable assumption: if they could do this well in this situation, court assumes would do equally well elsewhere in the market. 118
Note, though, that it’s only a presumption – can be rebutted, but onus is on ∆ to do so. 118
Rainbow Caterers v. CNR 118
Facts: 118
caterer was given incorrect information about the number of meals to be provided. 118
Entered K on the incorrect information, and in carrying it out lost $1 million, which it claimed in damages. 118
Issue: everyone agreed that reliance damages applied, but the question is how to calculate them. 118
∆ argued there are two roots of reliance: 118
1. If ∆ hadn’t made statement/had made true statement, wouldn’t have entered K, wouldn’t have lost money 118
2. If ∆ hadn’t made statement/had made true statement, would still have entered K, but on different terms. 118
∆ says, therefore, that the question isn’t what ’s total losses are, but rather what the difference is between the loss actually suffered and the loss would always have suffered on the alternative K it would have entered into. 118
Held: for . Typical reliance damages apply. 118
Reasons – Sopinka: 118
∆ argument is not invalid overall, it just doesn’t apply in this case. 118
Principle: where there has been a negligent misrepresentation inducing a K, a court will presume that had the negligent misrepresentation not been made, wouldn’t have entered into the K. 118
It’s a presumption – onus on ∆ to disprove. ∆ bears the risk. 118
Note: in BG Checo v. BC Hydro, ∆ was able to prove that still would have entered a contract. 118
In that case, damages are the net difference b/w loss actually suffered on the actual contract (contract A) and the loss that would have been suffered anyway, had entered into contract B. 118
Note: in tort, reliance damages CAN exceed expectation recovers all of its losses even if it might have suffered some anyway in a different situation. 118
Dissent – McLachlin 118
Even if we assume that wouldn’t have entered into the K, that doesn’t mean they should be entitled to all of the losses suffered as a result of entering the K have to consider principles of remoteness and causation. 118
McLachlin senses that lost such a high amount not just because ∆ gave bad estimate, but because was incompetent work crews were eating too much, wasn’t properly controlling the business. 119
McLachlin says some portion of the loss suffered is attributable to bad mgmt/poor business practices. 119
Sopinka for the majority says it doesn’t matter, because would never have had the chance to be incompetent if they hadn’t entered the K. 119
McLachlin says ∆ should only suffer the consequences of reliance, as opposed to the damages that arise as a result of their own incompetence. 119
This argument has not yet been resolved in Canadian law. 119
Negligence and Reliance in Professional Services 119
Breach of K cases e.g. K to hire a lawyer or surveyor to perform service, which is done negligently. 119
Issue: reliance vs. expectation 119
The answer is generally found by following causation: what did ∆ promise, and what loss is caused as a result of that promise? 119
Posesorski 119
Facts 119
Due to ∆ solicitor’s negligence, entered into deal for a property w/ unperfected title (encumbrance). 119
Purchase price: $325k. Actual value w/ encumbrance: $225k. 119
held the property for many years, then came to an agreement with the option-holder. Cost of eliminating: $260k. 119
Lost rents & expenses: $39,400 119
Legal expenses: ~$40k 119
Issue: wanted expectation damages 119
Held: reliance only. Expenses, plus $80k for the lost use of the $100k (difference in value.) 119
Reasons: could never have entered into the deal they wanted, so they couldn’t get expectation. 119
Messineo v. Beale [1978, ONCA] 119
Facts: wanted to buy Murch’s Point property. Purchase price $400k, expected value $500k. Market value was actually $408k due to title defect. 119
Issue: sought expectation – expected $100k profit 119
Held: Can’t have expectation damages. 119
Reasons: 119
There was no chance that could have actually obtained a property worth $500k. 119
Promise is that lawyer would take care in identifying title defects had promise been performed, title defect would have been found, but still never would have obtained a property worth $500k. 120
Kienzle v. Stringer 120
The rule limiting to out-of-pocket expenses is not invariable may sometimes be expectation 120
Facts: 120
Three siblings. Parents owned a farm. Parents died and son wanted to stay on the farm and work it. Hired ∆ lawyer to help him buy the farm from his siblings. 120
Lawyer prepares a K to sell the farm from the estate, because he thought the estate still owned the farm. SO, K b/w estate and son, and cash from that goes into the estate to be distributed to the siblings. 120
The lawyer was the administrator, so he should have known, but the estate had been sitting for so long that by operation of a rule of law the property had passed to the sisters. 120
So, goes through with K, estate is paid full price, but then it turns out the estate can’t give him the farm, because the sisters each have a third. 120
One sister just gives him her third, because she knows he paid the price and she’ll get her cut from the estate. 120
The other sister, though, makes him buy her third afresh, since the agreement with the estate was invalid. 120
So sues solicitor. 120
Held: Damages = cost of perfecting title 120
Cost of buying the farm from the mean sister. 120
Reasons: 120
Causation hired lawyer to arrange purchase of farm. Had ∆ not been negligent, he would have prepared a K with the sisters, not the estate. In this case, the amount of money to put in the position he would have been in = his additional costs. The focus is on what was promised. 120
So, negligent performance of a service may or may not result in expectation damages, depending on an analysis of what was promised, what the K called for, and what loss the breach caused. 120
Restitutionary Remedies 120
Basics 120
Restitution is both a remedy and a basis of liability. 120
Remedy: conceptualizing award to based on wrongly-acquired benefit by ∆ 120
Restitution as a remedy can be ordered either in monetary form (damages, accounting), or through another type of court order (proprietary remedies, e.g. tracing, constructive trusts) 120
Remedial Advantages: 121
Focus on ∆ benefit as opposed to loss. Can be very useful from an evidentiary perspective: 121
Overcomes problems of proof e.g. where can establish ∆ benefit but loss is speculative; onus on ∆ to show expenses to deduct from total benefit 121
Strategically, ∆ gain may be larger amount than loss [Whitwham, Strand Electric, Blake] 121
May provide in rem relief (as opposed to in personam) in rem may give priority over other creditors, or a claim to specific property-security 121
But see Philips v. Homfray 121
May provide some procedural advantages 121
E.g. limitation periods – may expire for ordinary tort, but different for K. 121
Established Categories of Restitution Remedy: 121
Money/services paid by mistake (to ∆ or to 3rd party) 121
Waiver of tort (for trespass, conversion, etc.) [Whitwham, Strand] 121
Where ∆ derived a benefit from committing a tort, but hasn’t really caused loss, can “waive the tort” and sue as if they were partners. 121
Basically, asking court to treat it as a contract case, where and ∆ were partners in an enterprise, and an implied term was that would get the benefit - otherwise why would have “approved” the act? (They didn’t, really, but that’s the waiver of tort) 121
It’s a fiction, used to give a higher level of award without actually changing the law. 121
This whole fiction has now been abolished, and courts just accept that sometimes there is a restitutionary remedy for torts. 122
Gains from intentional torts (sometimes disguised as punitive damages?) [Whitwham; Broome v. Cassell] 122
Requirements [per Broome v. Cassell] 122
1. Knowledge that it’s against the law 122
2. Conscious choice to continue because the prospects of advantage outweigh the prospects of loss/penalty 122
Gains from crime [Garland; Blake] 122
Breach of fiduciary duty 122
Intellectual property – patents, copyright 122
Breach of confidence [Peter Pan; Seager v. Copydex; Lac Minerals] 122
If courts were confined to compensatory (expectation) damages, would be encouraging breach of K by creating an incentive to try, since the worst that would happen is you’d have to keep the original bargain. 122
Courts want to encourage bargaining in good faith. 122
Courts are comfortable with restitutionary remedy where there was a special relationship of confidence – not just any breach of K case will merit these. 122
Necessitous intervention 122
To get compensation for benefits conferred in an emergency – i.e. if there had been time, ∆ would have agreed to pay for the service of saving their life/property 122
Service per quantum meruit (spousal cases) 122
Total failure of consideration 123
Void/voidable Ks (fraud, unconscionability, mistake, frustration) 123
Advance payments/benefits under Ks that fail to materialize 123
Benefits conferred under an unenforceable K [Degleman (1954, SCC)] 123
Domestic property constructive trust cases [Becker v. Pettkus] 123
Breach of K? Maybe. 123
Requirements for Restitution to be Granted 123
[per Garland] 123
1. ∆ must have acquired a benefit 123
The benefit can be positive (property, money, services) or negative (i.e. savings of some kind) 123
Does not have to be pecuniary, but must be quantifiable in monetary terms. 123
Onus on to prove this component. 123
2. Detriment to (causal connection) 123
Onus on to prove. 123
3. Must be an absence of a juristic reason for the benefit (i.e. it must be unjust) 123
Most common juristic reasons: gifts, Ks. 123
Also, where required by operation of law. 123
Onus on to prove 123
4. Other reasons to deny recovery 123
Onus on ∆ to prove this, once has established benefit, detriment and absence of juristic reason. 123
Possible reasons: 123
Public policy 123
Reasonable expectations [see e.g. Garland] 123
Would it be unduly oppressive/surprising for ∆ to have to pay back? 123
5. Defences 123
∆ must prove 123
e.g. change of position; delay; estoppel; acquiescence 123
6. Choice of Remedy 123
Money 123
Constructive trust 123
7. Quantification 123
Restitution in Contract 123
Can restitution be a remedy for breach of K? General rule is no, so far. 123
Competing policies: efficient breach vs. unjust enrichment 123
Efficient breach theory: generally, is entitled to compensation for loss, but ≠ for ∆ savings/benefits. [See Bank of America v. Mutual Trust (2002, SCC)] 124
But restitutionary motives are often at work in defining “compensation” [recall Groves] 124
Increasingly, in a narrow class of cases, restitution has been made an explicit contractual remedy [Wrotham Park; Blake] 124
Limitation: it’s not a general remedy must be a special case for disgorgement 124
(a) as a substitute for equitable relief? 124
(b) as required by public policy? 124
So, basically, it’s a high threshold to get restitution. 124
Note: Wrotham Park is still considered a leading case, but it’s not certain. [see e.g. Surrey Council v. Bredero; Jaggard v. Sawyer] 124
Where a wrong has resulted in benefit for ∆ at expense, courts conceptualize the transaction as ∆ having avoided a bargain with . 124
Quantum Various Approaches 124
Compensatory: 124
1. Reasonable wayleave, rent [see e.g. Whitwham; Strand Electric; Wrotham Park] 124
Where the wrong consists of use of property, court measures unjust enrichment by the amount ∆ should have paid had they bargained for the use in advance. 124
2. Opportunity costs 124
3. Royalty (capitalized) [see e.g. Seager] 124
Note: really, all three of the above categories are about opportunity costs, and are compensatory in nature. Courts just start the quantification by looking at ∆ benefit. 125
Accounting/Disgorgement: 125
4. Full value of wrongly acquired benefit (through constructive trust) [Lac Minerals] 125
5. Full gross revenue [see e.g. Blake] 125
Note, though, that courts will often apply a net revenue figure, recognizing that benefit to ∆ ≠ full amount received, but the full amount less expended $/effort. 125
But in Blake there was some serious moral outrage going on, and that impacts the remedy. 125
6. Account for full net profit [see e.g. Peter Pan; Lever v. Godwin; Phillips v. Homfray] 125
∆ has taken a benefit from . 125
7. Apportionment [argued unsuccessfully in Peter Pan; see Edwards v. Lees] 125
Punitive: 125
8. Punitive damages based on comparative profit/savings [see e.g. Townsview; Broome v. Cassell] 125
Quantum Meruit Awards: 125
9. Quantum meruit based on market value (e.g. value received measure often applied in domestic cases 125
Often where contribution from one side is non-monetary (i.e. one spouse/cohabitant bringing in salary, the other providing childcare or other work in the home) 125
Assess on quantum meruit basis and impose a constructive trust over the amount. 125
Labour cost of cooking, cleaning, childcare, but also mgmt aspect. How would the work be priced in the marketplace? 125
10. Quantum meruit based on joint enterprise (e.g. value survived in domestic cases) 125
In this measure, we don’t get too bogged down in the specific contributions. 125
Ongoing contributions into joint property, assess on the current value (hence “value survived”), and then impose a constructive trust on that current value. 126
Punitive Damages 126
Distinguishing Between Some Common Types of Damages 126
Non-Pecuniary Compensatory 126
Damages for things that can’t be easily calculated in monetary terms. 126
Still awarded under the Hadley v. Baxendale principle of compensation for benefits promised under a contract. [see e.g. Wilson v. Sooter; Ruxley; Fidler v. Sun Life] 126
No especially malicious behaviour or wrongdoing by ∆ is required – just breach of K. 126
Commonly awarded in tort cases where personal injury is severe enough to cause pain/suffering, lost amenities, loss of enjoyment of life, etc, it’s considered foreseeable, and included as part of compensatory damages. 126
Aggravated Compensatory 126
Courts are still working this out. 126
Basically, aggravated damages are compensatory damages in situations where there is an element of malice or high-handedness in the way ∆ has breached the K or committed the tort. 126
Because of the particularly bad way in which the breach has happened, ’s damages are greater than they would have been otherwise ∆’s conduct aggravated the harm to . 126
Will be awarded in tort, and sometimes in K, where courts want to provide increased compensation for additional harm suffered as a result of ∆ bad behaviour. 126
Punitive Non-Compensatory 126
A step above aggravated damages punishing bad behaviour regardless of damage. 126
Can be cumulative with regular non-pecuniary and aggravated damages [see e.g. Hill v. Church of Scientology] 126
When are Punitive Damages Available? 126
Concerns 126
Punitive damages are a strange hybrid, and many judges are uncomfortable with the concept of punishment in a civil action. 126
Concerns against awarding punitive damages: 126
1. Windfall to beyond compensation 127
2. Quasi-criminal mechanism, without the procedural protections of criminal law 127
Higher standard of proof (BRD vs. BOP) 127
Jury; guidelines in terms of sentencing 127
Not codified as in the Criminal Code definition is just “offensive, high-handed, malicious, etc.”, something that offends the conscience of society/the court. 127
3. Award amounts are extremely varied 127
The UK Position 127
Broome v. Cassell [1972, HL] 127
Shows the English approach to punitive damages. 127
Two categories of wrongs that can merit punitive damages. 127
Facts 127
Defamation case (most punitive damages cases are defamation cases) 127
Follows a typical model: publisher/writer knows something is untrue but publishes anyway because they will get more sales. 127
Issue: compensatory damages would be less than the value ∆ gained. 127
Held: minimal punitive damages awarded ($5000) – didn’t strip ∆ of the full gain. 127
Reasons 127
Punitive damages act as a deterrent, but to allow pure punishment contravenes the principles that have evolved to protect offenders. 127
No definition except in terms too vague to be admitted to a criminal code; 127
No limit to punishment except that it can’t be unreasonable 127
No method for appeal aside from alleging a procedural mistake – can’t appeal the sentence itself. 127
If the court had felt it could go so far, it would have abolished punitive damages entirely. 127
But, that would be a legislative act, so instead, just gathered all precedents and fit them into two categories in which punitive damages can be awarded: 127
1. Oppressive, unconstitutional and malicious conduct by government agents; or 127
2. Civil wrongs (torts) committed consciously with the intent of earning a profit where the tortfeasor has calculated that the profit will exceed the amount of compensatory damages to 127
It’s important to read this decision in the context of the court trying to narrow the availability of punitive damages. 127
Canadian Jurisprudence 127
In Canada, punitive damages are much more widely available than in the UK since Broome v. Cassell. 127
It’s not controversial at all to use punitive damages in torts cases 128
Very common in intentional tort cases assault, battery, esp. sexual assault cases. Also defamation. 128
Controversial issue, though: double penalty. 128
What about cases where there’s already a criminal sanction in place in relation to the same conduct – can a civil penalty be applied as well? Is this double jeopardy? 128
Canadian courts say this doesn’t bar a civil action, though the existence of a criminal charge will be an important consideration in the civil trial and any damages assessment. 128
Breaches of fiduciary duty, breaches committed consciously to earn profit available. 128
Negligence cases available [see e.g. Robitaille v. Vancouver] 128
Contract cases almost impossible [see Vorvis v. ICBC]. Until recently, never available [but see Whiten v. Pilot]. 128
Doctrine of efficient breach tends to predominate. 128
But, where a secondary provision of the contract is breached, may recover punitive damages available where the K is breached, and also something else actionable (i.e. other than the primary deliverable) is breached. 128
This is a narrow window [see e.g. Fidler v. Sun Life, in which the court declined to award punitive damages to an overly aggressive insurance company, because a robust and assertive defence by an insurance company of its position is not bad faith.] 128
In Whiten, ∆ exploited the bad financial position of s and attempted to delay and prolong proceedings to force into dropping their claim. ∆’s own investigator said it wasn’t arson. 128
So, key factors are: vulnerability of and intentional conduct of ∆ aimed at grinding down the customer with no intention of behaving honestly. 128
Counter-argument: punitive damages might also have been retrievable through an action for intentional infliction of mental distress, fraud, etc. 128
There must be an independently actionable wrong in order for punitive damages to be awarded [Whiten]. 129
US Jurisprudence 129
Some notorious US cases were referenced by the SCC in Whiten, showing the dangers of an out-of-control state of punitive damages. 129
However, in those cases, there is often a backstory to explain the high damages awards. [see e.g. Lebeck v. McDonalds; BMW v. Gore] 129
II. Limiting Factors 129
Intro to Limiting Factors: 129
Things in the law of damages that protect ∆s 129
Considerations of courts when determining and limiting damages: 129
Harm what is the loss suffered by ? 129
Justice as proportionality there should be balance b/w wrong and remedy 129
Self-help or individual reliance by s Sometimes s are in best position to mitigate consequences of a civil wrong 129
Efficiency not all wrongs are necessarily things we want to discourage. Courts are cautious in creating incentives/disincentives relating to particular activities/conduct 129
Judicial Administration ease of administrating remedies. It’s impossible to achieve perfection in this, and very expensive. Sometimes courts will adopt seemingly-arbitrary rules to limit damages just because the quest for perfection isn’t worth the effort. 129
Remoteness 129
Hadley v. Baxendale 129
This case is always the starting point for policy and law on remoteness of damages. 129
Facts: crankshaft sent away to get fixed; delay resulted in loss of profit. 129
Held: court refused to award lost profits. 129
Reasons: 129
Profits will always be lost, but perfect compensation isn’t the only goal. 129
The court set out an approach that has been seen as very restrictive – The Foreseeability Rule: 129
“Now we think the proper rule in such a case as the present is this: Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and reasonably be considered either arising naturally, i.e., according to the usual course of things, from such breach of contract itself, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of the breach of it. Now, if the special circumstances under which the contract was actually made were communicated by the plaintiffs to the defendants, and thus known to both parties, the damages resulting from the breach of such a contract, which they would reasonably contemplate, would be the amount of injury which would ordinarily follow from a breach of contract under these special circumstances so known and communicated.” 130
“But, on the other hand, if these special circumstances were wholly unknown to the party breaking the contract, he, at the most, could only be supposed to have had in his contemplation the amount of injury which would arise generally, and in the great multitude of cases not affected by any special circumstances, from such a breach of contract. For, had the special circumstances been known, the parties might have specially provided for the breach of contract by special terms as to the damages in that case, and of this advantage it would be very unjust to deprive them.“ 130
It’s a pretty strongly policy based rule: 130
People should be able to operate based on common sense assumptions. If this isn’t the case, it would be really bad for commerce, because everyone would have to spend time worrying about all the possible consequences of any action they take. 130
It makes sense to facilitate risk-planning that’s what contract is all about. We want to encourage parties to privately plan risks. 130
Note: this case was decided before: 130
Limited liability the case was b/w entrepreneurs personally instead of companies 130
Liability insurance there were no insurers for this sort of thing. 130
The words of the case aren’t really as strict as they sound, anymore, in light of these developments. 130
Parsons (Livestock) Ltd. v. Uttle Ingham [1978, QBCA] 130
Facts: 130
Lack of ventilation in storage hopper resulted in pigs dying of ecoli when their food went toxic. 130
Issue: is vendor responsible for the pigs’ death? 130
Held: Not too remote. Vendor liable. 130
CA overruled TJ, who found that it was not reasonably foreseeable that mouldy pignuts would cause ecoli in pigs. 131
Reasons: 131
An unfit hopper, the point of which is to store food, could foreseeably cause illness in pigs. 131
Comments: 131
It’s all variable depending on how you ask the question Hadley can be flexible, and courts manipulate it depending on how the question is framed. 131
Apparently, no expert in pig food or pigs would ever think that mouldy pignuts would result in ecoli – it’s extraordinary. But, the less you know about pigs, the easier it is to say that improper food storage could cause illness. 131
So, don’t get bogged down in statistical probabilities or the words it all comes down to what the court thinks is a fair allocation of risk. 131
Firms that design, manufacture, sell and install food storage devices should be responsible for the risk of bad food caused by the device malfunctioning. 131
People who sell products to store food shouldn’t be surprised at being held responsible for food that has been negatively affected by their faulty product. 131
They probably won’t be unfairly surprised at that responsibility, even if a pig expert (i.e. the farmer) would have been completely surprised by what happened. 131
Kienzle v. Stringer [1981, ONCA] 131
Facts 131
Recall: family farm dispute among siblings – son wanted to buy but lawyer made deal with estate instead of with siblings. 131
As a result of the delay in acquiring the farm, missed an opportunity to buy another farm (because the sale was predicated on the sale of the family farm) 131
Issue: 131
action against lawyer for cost of perfecting title (which he got), but also for: 131
1. Lost profit of $20k (because he stopped farming for two years) 131
2. Lost secondary transaction 131
Lost profit on the acquisition of the second farm – increased in value by $44k by trial. claimed $23k, the difference b/w appreciation on the farm lost and appreciation on the farm he had. 131
Held: $10k for one year lost farming profit, nothing on the secondary transaction. 131
Reasons: 131
Although the solicitor’s negligence did cause all the future losses, the court wouldn’t award damages for all of them. 131
Lost farming profit: one year was reasonable amount of time to disentangle himself from the mess. 131
Lost secondary transaction profits: 131
Doesn’t even go to Hadley v. Baxendale, just goes to policy: floodgates concern if lost opportunity costs could be awarded for land sale transactions. 132
At the bottom line, it’s just kind of unfair to make a solicitor responsible for this risk, because a second transaction that a person was going to enter is entirely out of ∆’s control. 132
It would be disproportionate to the amount the solicitor was paid and the risk he agreed to take on to give this risk to him too proportionality. Fee is calibrated to value of property and associated risks, not in wider context. 132
Basically, court says we draw an arbitrary line because we have to know to stop somewhere, and the policy is to stop at the second transaction. 132
Matheson v. Canada [2000, NSCA] 132
Facts: construction company successful bidder on federal gov’t project, but gov’t wrongfully cancelled K midway through and called ’s completion bond (a guarantee of satisfactory performance). sued for breach of K and won, recovering all losses on the project. 132
Issue: also sued for loss of subsequent projects – damage to reputation b/c of cancelled bond. 132
Held: no recovery of subsequent losses 132
Reasons 132
Although government did technically cause the loss of subsequent transactions, it’s not fair to hold them responsible for something they couldn’t foresee at time of K. 132
Court doesn’t want to go into statistical probabilities and the likelihood of this happening – just goes with what seems generally fair. 132
It wouldn’t be just to find that ∆ had taken on the risk of subsequent transactions. In contract law, one party doesn’t normally become the insurer of the other party’s financial health. 132
Summary of Remoteness 132
Issue is fairness 132
Policy is to encourage certainty, dispute resolution, and allocation of risk 132
So, consider: 132
Share with your friends: |