A-407-79
Canadian Pacific Limited (Appellant)
v.
Canadian Transport Commission (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Thurlow C.J., Heald J. and Kerr
D.J. — Ottawa, March 25, 26 and April 10, 1980.
Railways — Appeal from a decision of the Railway Trans
port Committee ordering appellant to re-file claims for subsi
dies for 1970-1974 inclusive for uneconomic railway branch
line designated as a branch line not to be abandoned —
Minister of Finance had already paid the claims for the years
in question — Whether the Commission has the power or
jurisdiction under s. 258(2) of the Railway Act or otherwise to
order the appellant to re-file its claims — Appeal allowed —
National Transportation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-17, as amend
ed, ss. 21, 24(1),(3), 45(3), 49, 63, 64(2) — Railway Act, R.S.C.
1970. c. R-2, ss. 252(a),(b), 256, 258(l)(a),(b),(2), 261(6),
413(5) — Railway Act, R.S.C. 1952. c. 234, s. 52.
Appeal pursuant to subsection 64(2) of the National Trans
portation Act, from a decision of the Railway Transport Com
mittee (R.T.C.) of the Canadian Transport Commission, order
ing the appellant to re-file claims for actual losses attributable
to uneconomic railway lines for all years claimed regardless of
whether payments had been made. The subject segment of the
appellant's railway system was designated as a branch line that
shall not be abandoned pursuant to paragraph 258(1)(a) of the
Railway Act. The appellant claimed, and was paid by the
Minister of Finance, subsidies for the years 1970 to 1974
inclusive, but withdrew its claims for the years 1975 to 1977
inclusive. The issue is whether the Commission has the power
or jurisdiction under subsection 258(2) of the Railway Act or
otherwise to order the appellant to re-file its claims.
Held, the appeal is allowed. The R.T.C. had no jurisdiction
to require the appellant to re-file claims.
Per Thurlow C.J.: The Commission's earlier determination
under subsection 258(2) of the Railway Act of the appellant's
"actual loss" was an order or decision within the meaning of
section 63 of the National Transportation Act, that, under that
provision, the Commission had jurisdiction to review and to
rescind, change, alter or vary. What is being required here is
that the appellant file anew a revised claim in respect of losses
which have already been claimed, determined and paid. There
is no provision or rule under which the Commission can require
or compel a railway company against its will to file a claim
under subsection 258(2) of the Railway Act if the company
does not elect to do so. For the same reason, the company
cannot be compelled to file a new or different claim. Moreover,
it is not a new or different claim that may be reviewed and
varied or changed under section 63.
Per Heald J.: Under section 258(2), the Commission per
forms a very limited twofold function. Firstly, it is required to
determine the actual loss of the railway company for the fiscal
period being claimed and thereafter, to make a recommenda
tion to the Minister of Finance with respect thereto. In the
decision herein impugned, it seeks to order the appellant to
re-file its claims for the period 1970 to 1974. There is no
authority in section 258 or elsewhere in the Railway Act or the
National Transportation Act upon which to base such an order.
The power to review, rescind, change, alter, or vary orders or
decisions conferred on the Commission by section 63 of the
National Transportation Act must be confined to orders which
the Commission is empowered to make.
Per Kerr D.J. dissenting: It should not be inferred that the
Commission's power to review conferred in section 63 of the
National Transportation Act does not apply to its prior deter
minations of the losses on the Estevan subdivision in the years
1970 to 1974. The Commission's obligation under section 258
of the Railway Act is to determine actual loss and to make a
recommendation to the Minister of Finance in that respect. If,
after determining the loss, it seems to the Commission that the
amount as determined by it was too small or too large, the
Commission has power under section 63 to review the matter
and make a new determination of the loss. Neither the Railway
Act nor the National Transportation Act indicates the method
or procedure to be followed by the Commission in discharging
its responsibility to determine actual losses, nor the procedure
to be followed by the Commission in reviewing a previous
determination of that kind. The method and procedure must be
largely left to the judgment, experience and expertise of the
Commission. The Committee with good reason concluded that
it should review its determinations of Canadian Pacific's
Estevan subdivision losses for the years 1970 to 1974, and that
its task of determining them correctly would be best served or
at least facilitated by a re-filing of claims.
Toronto Transportation Commission v. Canadian Nation
al Railways [1930] S.C.R. 94, affirmed sub nom. Canadi-
an Pacific Railway Co. v. Toronto Transportation Com
mission [1930] A.C. (P.C.) 686, referred to.
APPEAL.
COUNSEL:
H. Christian Wendlandt and Terrence
Moloney for appellant.
Henry L. Molot for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Law Department, Canadian Pacific Limited,
Montreal, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
THURLOW C.J.: This is an appeal under subsec
tion 64(2) of the National Transportation Act,
R.S.C. 1970, c. N-17, as amended, from a decision
of the Railway Transport Committee of the
Canadian Transport Commission dated January
22, 1979. The decision relates to a large number of
claims that had been made by the appellant and
two other railway companies for subsidies under
sections 256 and 258 of the Railway Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. R-2, in respect of losses incurred in the
operation of uneconomic branch lines. Some of the
claims had been disallowed. Others had been filed
and were pending before the Commission. In gen
eral what the decision purports to do is to establish
principles on which the claims will be dealt with by
the Commission. For this purpose, the Committee
isolated and discussed three main issues viz. the
main line/branch line issue, the segmentation issue
and the bridge traffic issue. The present appeal is
concerned only with the decision as it relates to the
segmentation issue and with only that part of it
which deals with claims which had been made by
the appellant under section 258 for subsidies in
respect of losses incurred in the operation of the
Bienfait-Kemnay segment of its Estevan subdivi
sion branch line for the fiscal years 1970 to 1974
inclusive. These claims, totalling 2.5 million dol
lars, differed from the others in that they had been
previously approved by the Commission and had
been paid and further in that with respect to them
the appellant had not proposed that they be
re-computed on a different basis nor had it offered
to re-file them. What is challenged in this appeal is
the jurisdiction of the Railway Transport Commit
tee to deal as it did with these claims.
The Committee's decision with respect to the
segmentation appears from the following.
The Committee has made disallowance on all claims for lines
which have been identified as segmentation cases, until this
issue is resolved. Table III lists the lines which have been
identified to date and the disallowances pertaining to each.
Approximately $25 million in disallowances are associated
with the segmentation issue. However, the financial signifi
cance of the issue is not fully reflected by this figure. Subsidy
payments under Section 258 of the Railway Act have been
made for Canadian Pacific Limited's Estevan Subdivision in
respect of the years 1970 to 1974 inclusive. This line was later
identified as a segmentation case and subsequent claims were
disallowed in total. The final disposition of these past pay
ments, amounting to approximately 2.5 million dollars, is also a
subject of this decision.
Table III is entitled:
Disallowances up to and Including 1976
Under Section 258 of the Railway Act
Made as a Result of the Segmentation Issue
(Millions of Dollars)
and includes the following item:
AMOUNT
RAILWAY SUBDIVISION DISALLOWED
CP Estevanw 3.32
and the note:
(1) All claims have been withdrawn from 1975 to present date,
no future claims to be submitted.
The Railways have proposed that "the total set of Railway
submissions must be filed in such a way that all railway lines,
for which no submissions have been made, form an intercon
nected railway network." This would appear to mean that a
non-claimed segment must not be effectively isolated from
the rest of the rail network. "Effectively isolated" means that
abandonment of the claimed line or a portion thereof would
result in one of the following:
—Traffic from a non-claimed line or portion thereof would
not have access to the rest of the rail system.
—Traffic from a non-claimed line or portion thereof would
have to be rerouted in an unreasonably circuitous
manner to reach its destination.
This principle would apply to the outstanding claims as
well as providing a guideline for future claim submissions. A
number of outstanding claims may be retracted because no
economic loss could be attributed to the claimed lines. Other
claims would be refiled retroactively if a basis still existed for
payment under Section 256 or 258 of the Railway Act.
Subsequent to the Railways' proposal, as above, Canadian
Pacific Limited withdrew their claims for the Estevan Sub
division for the years 1975, 1976, and 1977, these being
claims which were disallowed due to the segmentation prob-
lem. Canadian Pacific Limited has not offered to refile the
claims on the Estevan Subdivision in respect of years prior to
1975. It would therefore appear that a special case is being
argued for the Estevan Subdivision and that the principle
suggested for resolution of the segmentation issue should not
be applied in a case where payments have been made.
Based upon the various arguments and interpretations
placed before this Committee and following the detailed legal
review above, it is hereby decided that, with the exception of
past payments on the Estevan Subdivision, the Railways may
file subsidy claims for segments of branch lines providing
that any segment not claimed for subsidy would not be
effectively isolated from the rest of the network, if the
claimed segment of line were abandoned.
The Committee is of the opinion that where the abandon
ment of part of a branch line will result in the de facto
abandonment of another part of the branch line, common
sense dictates that the application for abandonment must be
considered in respect of both parts. In establishing this
principle we are doing no more than ensuring compliance
with the Railway Act which prohibits the abandonment of
the operation of a branch line or a part thereof without the
prior approval of the Committee.
In order to finalize past claims the Railways must refile all
claims on lines where segmentation problems now exist.
Furthermore, where this issue arises in future branch line
subsidy claims, each line will be evaluated on a case-by-case
basis and all factors which are relevant to a decision on each
case will be considered.
Claims on CP's Estevan Subdivision are to be reified for
all years claimed, regardless of whether payments have been
made. No convincing arguments have been placed before the
Committee to justify treating this line in a manner different
from any other segmentation case, nor has Canadian Pacific
Limited provided a compelling argument that claims for
years prior to 1975 should be treated in a manner different
from that for 1975 and subsequent years. Therefore, the
Committee must reject Canadian Pacific Limited's proposal
that they be allowed to retain all monies paid to date in
respect of this Subdivision.
Section 258 of the Railway Act provides:
258. (1) Notwithstanding anything in sections 252 to 257,
the Governor in Council may, from time to time, by order,
(a) designate branch lines that shall not be abandoned within
such periods as the Governor in Council may prescribe; and
(b) designate areas within which branch lines shall not be
abandoned within such periods as the Governor in Council
may prescribe;
and branch lines so designated or within areas so designated
shall not be approved for abandonment within the prescribed
periods nor shall an application for the abandonment of any
such line be made to the Commission within the prescribed
period.
(2) Where a branch line or any segment thereof is being
operated after the 22nd day of March 1967 at an actual loss
and the company operating that line or segment thereof is
unable to make an application for abandonment under section
253 by virtue of an order under subsection (I), the company
may claim for such loss and the Minister of Finance, on the
recommendation of the Commission and in accordance with
such regulations as the Governor in Council may make in that
regard, may, out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund, cause to
be paid to the company an amount not exceeding the actual loss
of the company, as determined by the Commission, attributable
to the operation of that line or segment in the financial year of
the company, or part thereof, for which the actual loss is
claimed.
It is common ground that the Estevan subdivi
sion of the appellant's railway was the subject of
an order under subsection 258(1) and that no
regulations have been made by the Governor in
Council under subsection 258(2).
Under that subsection, the Commission has
jurisdiction to determine "the actual loss of the
company". In the absence of rules of procedure for
the presentation of claims it would, in my opinion,
be open to a railway company, under this subsec
tion, to apply to the Commission to make such a
determination and to request an appropriate
recommendation to the Minister of Finance,
whether or not the claim had been previously made
directly to the Minister. In the present instance the
record does not disclose what procedure was fol
lowed but does indicate that the claims in question
for the years 1970-1974 inclusive, in respect of the
Estevan subdivision, had been paid. It is to be
assumed, therefore, that at some stage "the actual
loss of the company", for which the claims were
asserted, had been determined by the Commission.
I have some doubt that what is contained in the
Committee's decision with respect to the Estevan
subdivision is a decision or an order within the
meaning of subsection 64(2) of the National
Transportation Act from which an appeal may be
taken, since it is not a formal order of the Com
mission and does not purport to determine "the
actual loss of the company" in respect of which the
claims were made. It does, however, appear to
have been intended to finally determine a method
to be followed in re-computing the appellant's
claims under subsection 258(2) in respect of the
Estevan subdivision for all years, including years
prior to 1975, and to require the appellant to
re-file its claims for subsidies which, for the years
prior to 1975, had already been approved and paid.
In so far as this determination applied to claims
for the years 1975 to 1977 inclusive, there is no
problem. The railway companies had proposed a
basis of computation and that the claims should be
re-filed. Moreover, the appellant had subsequently
withdrawn its claims. But in so far as the decision
applied to years prior to 1975, the appellant had
made no such proposal and it is now faced with a
directive of the Committee which, whether or not
it has been incorporated in a formal order, the
appellant cannot ignore. No objection was taken in
the memorandum of fact and law filed on behalf of
the Attorney General of Canada that the decision
was not a decision or order from which an appeal
under subsection 64(2) would lie and I did not
understand counsel to so argue on the hearing of
the appeal. I propose, therefore, to deal with the
matter on the basis that an appeal does lie from
that part of the decision which requires the appel
lant to re-file its claims for the years prior to 1975.
In the view I take, the Commission's earlier
determination under subsection 258(2) of the
Railway Act of the appellant's "actual loss" from
the operation of the Bienfait-Kemnay segment of
the Estevan subdivision for the years in question
was an order or decision within the meaning of
section 63 of the National Transportation Act.' I
prefer to think of it as a decision rather than an
order but the difference is not significant. What is
significant is that it was an order or decision that,
under that provision, the Commission had jurisdic
tion to review and to rescind, change, alter or vary.
Moreover, as the determination was one that the
Commission had jurisdiction to make on the
I 63. The Commission may review, rescind, change, alter or
vary any order or decision made by it, or may re-hear any
application before deciding it.
application of the appellant, the initiation of a
review of its correctness was a matter that the
Commission had jurisdiction, under section 48 of
the National Transportation Act, 2 to inquire into,
hear and determine of its own motion. In the
exercise of that jurisdiction, the Commission, in
my opinion, has ample authority, under subsection
45(3) of the National Transportation Act, 3 to
require the appellant to provide evidence of facts
relevant to the matter to be determined. I see no
reason to doubt that the Commission can also
require the appellant to provide particulars which
it considers necessary for the purpose of reviewing
and determining whether any change or variation
of the earlier determination ought to be made.
But that is not what, as I interpret it, is being
required of the appellant. What, in my view, is
being required is that the appellant file anew, nunc
pro tunc, a revised claim in respect of losses which
have already been claimed, determined and paid.
The appellant is thus being forced to assert a claim
which it does not choose to assert; one that, if
asserted, would be in respect of an obligation that,
from its point of view, has already been discharged
and which, if it is to serve any purpose, will have to
be computed on a different basis and be different
from the claim or claims previously asserted.
There is, in my opinion, no provision or rule
under which the Commission can require or
compel a railway company against its will to file a
claim under subsection 258(2) if the company does
not elect to do so. The right to claim is its own, to
be exercised or not as the company decides. For
the same reason, in my opinion, the company
cannot be compelled to file a new or different
claim. Nothing in section 48 or section 63 author
2 48. The Commission may, of its own motion, or shall, upon
the request of the Minister, inquire into, hear and determine
any matter or thing that, under this Part or the Railway Act, it
may inquire into, hear and determine upon application or
complaint, and with respect thereto, has the same powers as,
upon any application or complaint, are vested in it by this Act.
3 45. ...
(3) The Commission, as respects the attendance and exami
nation of witnesses, the production and inspection of docu
ments, the enforcement of its orders, the entry on and inspec
tion of property, and other matters necessary or proper for the
due exercise of its jurisdiction, has all such powers, rights and
privileges as are vested in a superior court.
izes such an order. Moreover it is not a new or
different claim that may be reviewed and varied or
changed under section 63. What may be dealt with
under that section is a previous order or decision of
the Commission.
When a claim has been filed, the Commission
may, no doubt, exercise its statutory powers with
respect to that claim and in the process may call
for whatever information it requires to carry out
its functions. Further, when the information has
been obtained, the Commission can proceed to
deal with the claim in the manner that is appropri
ate and under section 63 the Commission may
subsequently review and vary or change its deci
sion. But that is a different thing from requiring a
claimant to assert at either stage a new and differ
ent claim to take the place of the claim it has filed
(and upon which the claimant may prefer to stand
or fall in the event of an appeal from the Commis
sion's decision) when the claimant has not consent
ed or proposed, as was the case with respect to the
other segmentation claims, to compute on a differ
ent basis and to re-file its claims.
The foregoing is, in my view, sufficient to dis
pose of the appeal. On the face of it, the other
question raised by the appellant, viz., "Did the
Canadian Transport Commission err as a matter
of law or jurisdiction in that by the above-men
tioned decision it decided that the appellant must
repay the monies lawfully paid to it in the circum
stances set forth ..." does not arise from the
rejection by the Commission of the appellant's
proposal or from anything else contained in the
decision. There has been neither an order to repay
nor a variation or change, under section 63, of the
earlier determination.
I would certify to the Commission that, in the
opinion of the Court, the Railway Transport Com
mittee had no jurisdiction to require the appellant
to re-file claims under subsection 258(2) of the
Railway Act for subsidies in respect of its losses
from its operation of the Bienfait-Kemnay seg
ment of the Estevan subdivision of its railway for
the years 1970-1974 inclusive and the appellant
cannot be required, by the Commission, to do so.
Having regard to Rule 1312, there should be no
order for costs.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is an appeal pursuant to section
64(2) of the National Transportation Act, with
leave of this Court, on questions of law or jurisdic
tion, from a decision of the Railway Transport
Committee (R.T.C.) of the Canadian Transport
Commission dated January 22, 1979.
The relevant facts surrounding the proceedings
before the R.T.C. may be summarized as follows.
The Estevan, Saskatchewan subdivision of the
appellant's railway system was designated by the
Governor in Council as a branch line that shall not
be abandoned, pursuant to the provisions of section
258(1)(a) of the Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.
R-2. 4
Pursuant to the provisions of section 258(2) of
the Railway Act, the appellant claimed, for the
4 Said section 258 reads as follows:
258. (I) Notwithstanding anything in sections 252 to 257,
the Governor in Council may, from time to time, by order,
(a) designate branch lines that shall not be abandoned
within such periods as the Governor in Council may
prescribe; and
(b) designate areas within which branch lines shall not be
abandoned within such periods as the Governor in Council
may prescribe;
and branch lines so designated or within areas so designated
shall not be approved for abandonment within the prescribed
periods nor shall an application for the abandonment of any
such line be made to the Commission within the prescribed
period.
(2) Where a branch line or any segment thereof is being
operated after the 22nd day of March 1967 at an actual loss
and the company operating that line or segment thereof is
unable to make an application for abandonment under sec
tion 253 by virtue of an order under subsection (1), the
company may claim for such loss and the Minister of
Finance, on the recommendation of the Commission and in
accordance with such regulations as the Governor in Council
may make in that regard, may, out of the Consolidated
Revenue Fund, cause to be paid to the company an amount
not exceeding the actual loss of the company, as determined
by the Commission, attributable to the operation of that line
or segment in the financial year of the company, or part
thereof, for which the actual loss is claimed.
years 1970 to 1974 inclusive, its actual losses
attributable to the Bienfait, Saskatchewan to
Kemnay, Manitoba portion of the Estevan subdivi
sion rail line which, in its view, was a segment of a
branch line within the meaning of said section
258(2). Pursuant to the provisions of section
258(2), the Minister of Finance paid to the appel
lant approximately 2.5 million dollars in respect of
the Bienfait-Kemnay portion of the Estevan sub
division rail line for the years 1970 to 1974
inclusive.
By a letter dated May 30, 1978 to the R.T.C.
the appellant withdrew its claims for actual losses
for said portion of the Estevan subdivision rail line
for the years 1975 to 1977 inclusive.
The question of the propriety of the method
being used by the appellant (along with the
Canadian National Railways and Northern Alber-
ta Railways) to claim subsidies for branch lines
"frozen" by Order in Council pursuant to section
258 of the Railway Act, was raised by the respond
ent Commission at least as early as the summer of
1975. In October of 1975, the appellant requested
the Commission to "re-examine this issue".
So far as the record before the Court discloses, 5
the next event relevant to this appeal, to occur, was
the request by the appellant to the R.T.C., in the
early summer of 1977, that it expedite the claim of
the appellant under section 258 for the segment of
the Estevan subdivision between Bienfait and
Kemnay. The R.T.C. replied to this request by a
letter to the appellant dated July 22, 1977. The
pertinent portion of that letter reads as follows:
In analysing your final claim in respect of this line, it was
noted, for the first time, that profitable traffic just beyond
Bienfait on the Estevan Subdivision was excluded from the
calculations since you had segmented the line so that the point
of origin was not included in the segment claimed for. In
addition, your working papers were incomplete as they did not
reflect the actual routing of this traffic and we had therefore
assumed that it was routed to the main line via the Portal
Subdivision, whereas the indications now are that this traffic is
in actual fact shipped via the Estevan Subdivision.
5 I became apparent at the hearing of the appeal that the
record before us was incomplete in so far as correspondence
and records of meetings and discussions between the parties is
concerned.
A number of similar cases of branch line segmentation have
been identified and payment of claims is pending a policy
decision by the RTC regarding the methodology to be applied
in these cases. You will be notified of the Committee's decision
when such is rendered.
By letter dated September 7, 1977, the R.T.C.
sent to the appellant a rather lengthy document
entitled "Subsidy Determination—Legal Issues"
which had been prepared in the offices of the
R.T.C. In that letter the R.T.C. proposed certain
procedures for dealing with the questions in issue,
including the hearing of representations by the
appellant and the other railway companies
involved in these issues. The appellant replied on
October 13, 1977 and sent to the R.T.C. its "posi-
tion paper" on the R.T.C. document referred to
supra.
Thereafter a number of meetings between offi
cials of the appellant and the R.T.C. were held
between October 14, 1977 and January 20, 1978
to discuss the matters in issue, one of which was
the "segmentation" issue. On January 26, 1978,
the appellant sent a telex to the R.T.C. summari
zing its position with respect to the proposed han
dling of branch line compensation claims. That
portion of the telex relating to the Estevan subdivi
sion reads as follows:
C.P. Rail will not file for this subdivision from 1978 onward
until the status of this line has been determined pursuant to
discussions to be held with the R.T.C. Claims from 1970 to
1977 will stand.
Under date of March 7, 1978, the R.T.C. replied
to the appellant's telex referred to supra. In that
letter, the R.T.C. observed that, in its view, there
were inconsistencies in the approach of the rail
ways in three areas. One of the three areas
referred to was the appellant's approach in respect
of the Estevan subdivision. In that regard, the
R.T.C. stated:
Based on previous discussions with CP regarding the Estevan
subdivision, the Committee was of the opinion that this item
was resolved. The Committee now wishes to ascertain why this
particular line should receive treatment different from that you
propose for the other "segmented" lines.
The letter then closed with the following
paragraphs:
We have received from our staff an exposition and analysis
of your latest positions which indicate that we are very close to
agreement, the exceptions being the three aforementioned
areas. The Committee feels, therefore, that it would be helpful
if the Railways would review these lines in preparation for a
meeting at which a final clarification of positions might be
achieved.
1 shall be contacting you in the next few days to ascertain
your views and to arrange for the meeting, if such is necessary
at the earliest possible date.
The next development, so far as the record before
us discloses, is the letter from the appellant to the
R.T.C. dated May 30, 1978 and referred to supra
in which the appellant withdrew its claims for
actual losses for the Estevan subdivision for the
years 1975 to 1977 inclusive. That letter reads as
follows:
I understand that there has been some discussion recently
between our Mr. Frank Wallace and Mr. A. Johanson of the
R.T.C. staff about the position of C.P. Rail in respect to its
past claims for compensation relating to the Estevan
Subdivision.
In order that the matter may be clarified once and for all the
Company hereby withdraws the claims it has made under
Section 258 of the Railway Act relating to the Estevan Subdivi
sion for the years 1975, 1976 and 1977, which claims were, as I
understand it, in the following amounts:
1975 $1,196,956
1976 $1,400,413
1977 $1,304,628
With the removal of this seeming obstacle the way should
now be cleared for settlement of the outstanding subsidy and
related issues that were the subject of our meetings with the
R.T.C. last fall, at least insofar as they relate to C.P. Rail, and
1 would be obliged if you would so confirm.
The R.T.C. replied to the appellant's letter of May
30, 1978, by a letter dated June 9, 1978. That
letter reads as follows:
This acknowledges the receipt of your letter dated May 30,
1978, in which you withdraw Canadian Pacific's subsidy claims
under Section 258 of the Railway Act relating to the Estevan
Subdivision for the years 1975, 1976 and 1977.
Since no mention is made regarding claims for the Estevan
Subdivision in respect of the years 1974 and prior, we assume
you intend that these claims remain unaltered and payments be
finalized without regard to the "segmented" traffic. This course
of action is contrary to the method proposed by the railways for
all other "segmented" lines, wherein you have agreed to re-file
all claims so that "segmented" portions of lines are included in
your claims.
The Committee is in the final stages of deciding the main
line/branch line, bridge traffic and segmentation issues and will
be informing you of its decisions in the near future.
Thereafter, the record before us discloses nothing
in the way of further meetings, discussions, or
correspondence relevant to the issues in this
appeal.
The next relevant occurrence in the record
before us is the "Decision" of the R.T.C. dated
January 22, 1979 (A.B. pp. 67 to 99 inclusive).
That "decision" purports to deal with three mat
ters, namely:
(a) the distinction between a main line and a
branch line;
(b) the issue of segmentation; and
(c) the issue of bridge traffic.
The purpose of this "decision" as stated by the
R.T.C. was as follows (A.B. p. 68):
The issuance of this decision, which resolves these issues, will
result in the disposition of previously questionable subsidy
claims and will provide the Railways with guidelines for use in
the preparation of future subsidy claims.
The only portion of the "decision" which is the
subject of appeal in these proceedings is that por
tion dealing with the segmentation issue (A.B. pp.
84 to 91 inclusive). After observing that the
R.T.C. had disallowed all outstanding unpaid
claims where the segmentation issue was pertinent,
the Committee said:
Approximately $25 million in disallowances are associated
with the segmentation issue. However, the financial signifi
cance of the issue is not fully reflected by this figure. Subsidy
payments under Section 258 of the Railway Act have been
made for Canadian Pacific Limited's Estevan Subdivision in
respect of the years 1970 to 1974 inclusive. This line was later
identified as a segmentation case and subsequent claims were
disallowed in total. The final disposition of these past pay
ments, amounting to approzimately [sic] 2.5 million dollars, is
also a subject of this decision.
Then, after a detailed discussion of the issue, in
which the appellant's submissions were rejected,
the Committee purported to make the following
order:
Claims on CP's Estevan Subdivision are to be refiled for all
years claimed, regardless of whether payments have been made.
No convincing arguments have been placed before the Commit
tee to justify treating this line in a manner different from any
other segmentation case, nor has Canadian Pacific Limited
provided a compelling argument that claims for years prior to
1975 should be treated in a manner different from that for
1975 and subsequent years. Therefore, the Committee must
reject Canadian Pacific Limited's proposal that they be allowed
to retain all monies paid to date in respect of this Subdivision.
It is this "order" or "decision" which is attacked in
this appeal.
It is the submission of the appellant that the
Commission does not have the power or jurisdic
tion under section 258(2) of the Railway Act or
otherwise to order the appellant to re-file its claims
for subsidy for the years 1970 to 1974 inclusive.
A consideration of the relevant provisions of
both the Railway Act and the National Transpor
tation Act impels me to the view that this submis
sion has merit.
For a proper consideration of this issue, it is
instructive, in my view, to compare the provisions
of section 258 of the Railway Act (supra) with
section 256 of that Act. Section 256 reads as
follows:
256. (1) In this section
"claim period" means, in relation to any uneconomic line of
railway, the period
(a) beginning ninety days after the date the application to
abandon the line has been filed with the Commission in
accordance with the rules and regulations of the Commis
sion, and
(b) ending on
(i) the date fixed by the Commission, or as varied pursuant
to section 64 of the National Transportation Act, for the
abandonment of the branch line, or the last operated
segment thereof, as the case may be, or
(ii) the date upon which an order fixing a date or dates for
the abandonment of the line is rescinded by the Commis
sion under section 254,
whichever date first occurs;
"fiscal period" means the period commencing on the 1st day of
April in any year and ending on the 31st day of March in the
following year;
"uneconomic line of railway" means a branch line that has
been determined to be uneconomic by the Commission under
section 254.
(2) When an uneconomic line of railway, or any segment
thereof, is being operated within a claim period, the company
operating it may file a claim with the Commission for the
amount of any actual loss of the company attributable to the
line in any financial year of the company within the claim
period, or, where only part of a financial year is within the
claim period, in that part thereof within the claim period.
(3) A claim under this section shall be filed with the Com
mission not later than three months after the commencement of
the fiscal period next following the financial year of the com
pany in which the actual loss was incurred.
(4) The Commission shall examine the claim and shall
certify the amount of the actual loss, if any, that in its opinion
was attributable to the line and the Minister of Finance, on the
recommendation of the Commission, may, in respect of the loss,
cause to be paid to the company out of the Consolidated
Revenue Fund an amount not exceeding the amount of the loss
as certified by the Commission.
(5) Where any payment has been made under subsection (4),
notice of the amount of the payment and of the total amount of
all such payments in respect of the actual losses of the company
attributable to the line in earlier years, if any, shall, in accord
ance with any regulation of the Commission in that behalf,
(a) be posted by the company in all stations on the branch
line in respect of which the payment was made; and
(b) be published by the company in at least one newspaper
circulating in the area served by that branch line.
(6) The Commission may authorize and direct an adjustment
to be made in any payment to a railway company in one fiscal
period for or on account of an underpayment or overpayment
made under this section to that company in an earlier fiscal
period.
(7) In the determination of any actual loss for the purposes
of section 253 or this section,
(a) the Commission may, subject to paragraph (b), include
therein or exclude therefrom such items and factors relating
to costs and revenues as to the Commission seem proper; and
(b) the Commission shall, in determining for the purposes of
this subsection the items and factors that may be taken into
account by it relating to revenues, have regard to any pay
ments received by the company under section 272.
(8) Nothing in paragraph (7)(b) shall be construed as
restricting or otherwise limiting the Commission in determin
ing, for any of the purposes of this Act, the items and factors
that may be taken into account by it relating to revenues.
Section 256 deals with the procedure to be fol
lowed by railways making claims for actual losses
incurred in the operation of branch lines or seg
ments thereof which have not been "frozen" by
Order in Council under section 258(1).
Section 258(2) sets out the procedure to be
followed when claiming for actual losses incurred
in the operation of branch lines or segments there-
of which have been "frozen" by Order in Council
under section 258(1).
A comparison of the two sections reveals signifi
cant differences. A section 256 claim must be filed
with the Commission within a specified time
period. In section 258(2) there is no requirement
that the claim be filed with the Commission. I
infer, rather, from the language used, that the
claim is to be made to the Minister of Finance who
acts on the recommendation of the Commission
after it has determined the company's actual loss.
Section 256 requires the Commission to "examine
the claim". No such precise language is to be
found in section 258. Section 256(6) gives the
Commission power to direct an adjustment to be
made for or on account of an underpayment or
overpayment made under the section to a railway
company in an earlier fiscal period. No corre
sponding power is given to the Commission under
section 258. However, the Minister of Finance on
the recommendation of the Commission, has a
similar power of adjustment in respect of pay
ments made under section 258 pursuant to the
provisions of section 413(5) of the Railway Act. 6
Accordingly, it is clear to me, that under section
258(2), the Commission performs a very limited,
albeit very important twofold function. Firstly, it is
required to determine the actual loss of the railway
company for the fiscal period being claimed and
thereafter, to make a recommendation to the Min
ister of Finance with respect thereto. In the case at
bar, the Commission performed its section 258(2)
functions, by determining appellant's actual loss at
approximately 2.5 million dollars for the period
1970 to 1974 inclusive. It then recommended pay
ment accordingly and the Minister of Finance
made payment accordingly. In my view, at that
juncture, the Commission's powers and duties
under section 258(2) were exhausted and at an end
so far as this particular claim was concerned. In
the decision herein impugned, it seeks to order the
appellant to re-file its claims for the period 1970 to
6 413....
(5) The Minister of Finance on the recommendation of the
Commission may make an adjustment in any payment to a
railway company under this section or sections 256, 258, 261
and 272 in or for one year for or on account of an underpay-
ment or overpayment made under this section in an earlier
year.
1974. I can find no authority in section 258 or
elsewhere in the Railway Act or the National
Transportation Act upon which to base such an
order. Section 258(2) allows the appellant to file a
claim. It did so and the claim was dealt with and
finalized. There is nothing in the language of the
section which gives the Commission authority to
require the filing of a new claim.
The respondent submits that section 63 of the
National Transportation Act 7 would give to the
Commission the power to do what it seeks to do in
this order. I do not agree with this submission. The
power to review, rescind, change, alter, or vary
orders or decisions conferred on the Commission
by section 63 must surely be confined to orders
which the Commission is empowered to make. If
the Commission has no power to order a re-filing,
then the section 63 power to review such an order
is of no assistance to it. It is important to realize
that what the Commission was really doing here
was not making a new determination or a re-deter
mination of the appellant's actual loss but, rather,
ordering the appellant to re-file its claim for loss.
It may well be that if the Commission had made a
re-determination of appellant's actual loss, it
would have been acting within the powers given to
it under section 63. On this question, I find it
unnecessary to express a concluded opinion since,
in my view, the Commission here was not rescind
ing or altering a previous order competently made
by it but was making an order which it did not
have jurisdiction to make and, accordingly, section
63 has no application to the situation.
The other portion of the R.T.C.'s order which is
impugned in this appeal is the sentence quoted
supra and reading as follows:
Therefore, the Committee must reject Canadian Pacific's pro
posal that they be allowed to retain all monies paid to date in
respect of this Subdivision.
As I read this sentence, I do not perceive it to be
an "... order, decision, rule or regulation" which
can be the subject of an appeal to this Court under
7 Said section 63 reads as follows:
63. The Commission may review, rescind, change, alter or
vary any order or decision made by it, or may re-hear any
application before deciding it.
section 64(2) of the National Transportation Act.
It seems rather to be a rejection of a proposal and
an expression of opinion rather than a binding
order or decision. It is therefore my view that with
respect to this sentence, the Court is without juris
diction to certify an opinion to the Commission
under section 64(2).
Accordingly, and for the foregoing reasons, I
would certify to the Commission that, in the opin
ion of the Court, the R.T.C. had no jurisdiction to
require the appellant to re-file claims under section
258(2) of the Railway Act for subsidies in respect
of its losses from its operation of the Bienfait-
Kemnay segment of the Estevan subdivision of its
railway for the years 1970 to 1974 inclusive, and
the appellant cannot be required by the Commis
sion to do so.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
KERR D.J. (dissenting): This is an appeal from
a certain portion of a 28 page decision (so en
titled), dated January 22, 1979, of the Railway
Transport Committee of the Canadian Transport
Commission, which refers to and indicates that the
Committee is reviewing claims made by Canadian
Pacific for loss sustained by it in the years 1970 to
1974, inclusive, in respect of a segment of its
Estevan subdivision, which claims had, prior to the
decision, been paid by the Minister of Finance to
Canadian Pacific on the recommendation of the
Commission pursuant to section 258(2) of the
Railway Act.
It is undisputed that:
(a) Canadian Pacific's Estevan subdivision was
designated pursuant to section 258(1) of the
Railway Act as a line that shall not be
abandoned,
(b) Canadian Pacific filed, under section
258(2), for each year 1970 to 1974, inclusive,
subsidy claims for actual losses attributable to
the operation of the Bienfait-Kemnay segment
of the Estevan subdivision with the Commission,
and
(c) upon recommendation of the Commission
and pursuant to section 258(2), the Minister of
Finance caused to be paid to Canadian Pacific
approximately 2.5 million dollars in respect of
the said claims.
It does not appear that the Commission or the
Committee made any order additional or supple
mentary to the decision. Canadian Pacific treats
the portion of the decision appealed from as being
an order, and its notice of appeal states the follow
ing question of law or of jurisdiction:
Did the Canadian Transport Commission err as a matter of
law or jurisdiction in that by the above-mentioned Decision it
1. Ordered the Appellant to refile claims made by it for actual
loss sustained in the years 1970 to 1974, inclusive, in respect of
a segment of its branch line of railway, viz, the Bienfait-Kem-
nay portion of the Estevan Subdivision, situated in the Province
of Saskatchewan, which claims had, previously to the Decision,
been allowed and lawfully paid by the Minister of Finance to
the Appellant on the recommendation of the Respondent Com
mission pursuant to the provisions of Section 258(2) of the
Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.R-2?
and
2. Decided that the Appellant must repay the moneys lawfully
paid to it in the circumstanced [sic] set forth in paragraph (I)
above?
The Railway Transport Committee is a committee
established pursuant to section 24 of the National
Transportation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-17. Subsec
tions (1) and (3) are as follows:
24. (1) For the purposes of performing its duties under this
Act the Commission shall establish the following committees
consisting of not less than three commissioners, exclusive of the
President who shall be ex officio a member of every such
committee:
(a) railway transport committee;
(b) air transport committee;
(c) water transport committee;
(d) motor vehicle transport committee;
(e) commodity pipeline transport committee; and
(f) such other committees as the Commission deems
expedient.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in the Railway Act or the
National Energy Board Act governing matters before the Com
mission, a committee of the Commission may, in accordance
with the rules and regulations of the Commission, exercise all
the powers and duties of the Commission and the orders, rules
or directions made or issued by a committee of the Commission
have effect, subject to subsection (4), as though they were
made or issued by the Commission.
Sections 256 to 263, inclusive, of the Railway Act
deal with uneconomic railway branch lines and
uneconomic passenger train services, their aban
donment and discontinuance, and determination
and payment of claims for the amounts of actual
losses of the railway companies attributable to the
lines and services.
The segment of Canadian Pacific's Estevan sub
division to which this appeal relates comes under
section 258. That section and section 252 are as
follows:
252. In this section and sections 253 to 258,
"actual loss", in relation to any branch line means the excess of
(a) the costs incurred by the company in any financial year
thereof in the operation of the line and in the movement of
traffic originating or terminating on the line,
over
(b) the revenues of the company for that year from the
operation of the line and from the movement of traffic
originating or terminating on the line;
"branch line" means a line of railway in Canada of a railway
company that is subject to the jurisdiction of Parliament
that, relative to a main line within the company's railway
system in Canada of which it forms a part, is a subsidiary,
secondary, local or feeder line of railway, and includes a part
of any such subsidiary, secondary, local or feeder line of
railway.
258. (1) Notwithstanding anything in sections 252 to 257,
the Governor in Council may, from time to time, by order,
(a) designate branch lines that shall not be abandoned within
such periods as the Governor in Council may prescribe; and
(b) designate areas within which branch lines shall not be
abandoned within such periods as the Governor in Council
may prescribe;
and branch lines so designated or within areas so designated
shall not be approved for abandonment within the prescribed
periods nor shall an application for the abandonment of any
such line be made to the Commission within the prescribed
period.
(2) Where a branch line or any segment thereof is being
operated after the 22nd day of March 1967 at an actual loss
and the company operating that line or segment thereof is
unable to make an application for abandonment under section
253 by virtue of an order under subsection (1), the company
may claim for such loss and the Minister of Finance, on the
recommendation of the Commission and in accordance with
such regulations as the Governor in Council may make in that
regard, may, out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund, cause to
be paid to the company an amount not exceeding the actual loss
of the company, as determined by the Commission, attributable
to the operation of that line or segment in the financial year of
the company, or part thereof, for which the actual loss is
claimed.
For convenience, I shall next indicate certain
provisions of the National Transportation Act that
appear to be relevant for consideration in dealing
with this appeal.
21. It is the duty of the Commission to perform the functions
vested in the Commission by this Act, the Railway Act, the
Aeronautics Act and the Transport Act with the object of
coordinating and harmonizing the operations of all carriers
engaged in transport by railways, water, aircraft, extraprovin-
cial motor vehicle transport and commodity pipelines; and the
Commission shall give to this Act, the Railway Act, the
Aeronautics Act and the Transport Act such fair interpretation
as will best attain that object.
48. The Commission may, of its own motion, or shall, upon
the request of the Minister, inquire into, hear and determine
any matter or thing that, under this Part or the Railway Act, it
may inquire into, hear and determine upon application or
complaint, and with respect thereto has the same powers as,
upon any application or complaint, are vested in it by this Act.
49. Any power or authority vested in the Commission may,
though not so expressed, be exercised from time to time, or at
any time, as the occasion may require.
63. The Commission may review, rescind, change, alter or
vary any order or decision made by it, or may re-hear any
application before deciding it.
Section 64(2) provides for an appeal from the
Commission to the Federal Court of Appeal, with
leave, upon a question of law or a question of
jurisdiction, from an order, decision, rule or regu
lation sought to be appealed from.
As appears from the decision and the material in
the Appeal Book, the Committee had encountered
three major problems in dealing with claims by the
railway companies under sections 256 and 258 of
the Railway Act. The decision commences with an
"Introduction", the first two paragraphs of which
are as follows:
INTRODUCTION
Under the provisions of Sections 256 and 258 of the Railway
Act, the Railways are entitled to submit subsidy claims, pre
pared in accordance with the Cost Order R-6313, for losses
incurred in the operation of uneconomic branch lines. Of the
claims which the Railways have submitted over the years
pursuant to these sections of the Act, some 97% of the total
dollars claimed are in respect of lines in the three Prairie
Provinces. In reviewing these claims and determining the
amounts of subsidy payable, the Committee has encountered
three major problems with the Railways' approach requiring
further consideration and final resolution. Firstly, claims have
been submitted for rail lines whose characteristics are such that
they may not qualify as branch lines pursuant to Section 252 of
the Railway Act. A second group of claims has been submitted
for segments of railway lines such that certain traffic, which
would appear to be totally dependent upon these lines, has been
excluded from the claims. Finally, some claims have been
submitted for lines which perform a bridge function for a
considerable portion of the traffic carried, yet all of the costs
and revenues of this traffic have not been included in the
calculation of the actual loss for these lines. The latter two
approaches may not be in accordance with the intent of the
Railway Act and/or the Cost Order.
The foregoing issues requiring resolution have been referred
to as:
—The Main Line/Branch Line issue
—The Segmentation Issue
—The Bridge Traffic Issue
The issuance of this decision, which resolves these issues, will
result in the disposition of previously questionable subsidy
claims and will provide the Railways with guidelines for use in
the preparation of future subsidy claims.
The record shows that there was correspondence
between the Committee and railway companies,
and meetings, conferences and discussions.
Numerous branch lines and segments thereof were
involved, with consequent problems as to the kinds
of traffic and the kinds of expenses and revenues,
and the amounts thereof, to be considered and
included or excluded, in deciding "actual loss".
Quite a few millions of dollars were claimed. It is
not surprising that the Committee felt that it
should review the problems with the benefit of
experience.
What the Committee calls the "Segmentation
Issue" is dealt with at pages 16 to 21 of the
decision, pages 84 to 91 of the Appeal Book. The
last four paragraphs thereof are as follows:
Based upon the various arguments and interpretations placed
before this Committee and following the detailed legal review
above, it is hereby decided that, with the exception of past
payments on the Estevan Subdivision, the Railways may file
subsidy claims for segments of branch lines providing that any
segment not claimed for subsidy would not be effectively
isolated from the rest of the network, if the claimed segment of
line were abandoned.
The Committee is of the opinion that where the abandon
ment of part of a branch line will result in the de facto
abandonment of another part of the branch line, common sense
dictates that the application for abandonment must be con
sidered in respect of both parts. In establishing this principle we
are doing no more than ensuring compliance with the Railway
Act which prohibits the abandonment of the operation of a
branch line or a part thereof without the prior approval of the
Committee.
In order to finalize past claims the Railways must refile all
claims on lines where segmentation problems now exist. Fur
thermore, where this issue arises in future branch line subsidy
claims, each line will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis and
all factors which are relevant to a decision on each case will be
considered.
Claims on CP's Estevan Subdivision are to be refiled for all
years claimed, regardless of whether payments have been made.
No convincing arguments have been placed before the Commit
tee to justify treating this line in a manner different from any
other segmentation case, nor has Canadian Pacific Limited
provided a compelling argument that claims for years prior to
1975 should be treated in a manner different from that for
1975 and subsequent years. Therefore, the Committee must
reject Canadian Pacific Limited's proposal that they be allowed
to retain all monies paid to date in respect of this Subdivision.
On my appreciation of the submissions made on
behalf of Canadian Pacific at the hearing of this
appeal the principal points are succinctly set forth
in its memorandum of points of argument filed by
its general solicitor with the Court, and they are as
follows:
15. The Commission, once having made a determination with
respect to the actual losses incurred by the Appellant resulting
from operations of the Bienfait-Kemnay portion of Appellant
Estevan Subidivision, for the years 1970 to 1974 inclusive, and
having recommended payment thereof to the Minister of
Finance the whole in accordance with the provisions of Section
258(2) of the Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970 c.R-2, the Commission
is functus officio with respect to such claims of the Appellant.
17. The validity of the claims filed by the Appellant for the
years 1970 to 1974 inclusive, as aforesaid, are not in any
manner impugned by the Decision of the Railway Transport
Committee nor is the validity of the claims filed by the
Appellant in any manner in issue before this Honourable
Court.
18. The provisions of subsection 6 of Section 256 of the
Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.R-2, dealing as they do with the
right of the Commission to authorize and direct adjustments to
be made with respect to overpayments or underpayments, are
not authority for the proposition that the Commission may
order the Appellant to refile its claims for previous years.
20. The dispositive of the Decision of the Commission to
oblige the Appellant to refile for all years claimed in respect of
the Estevan Subdivision, when read together with the Commis
sion's rejection of the Appellant's proposal that they be allowed
to retain all monies paid to date in respect of the aforesaid
subdivision is evidently an attempt by the Commission to
exercise its powers under Section 63 of the National Transpor
tation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.N-17, to retroactively review,
rescind, change, alter or vary its recommendation for payment
originally made with respect to the claims filed by the
Appellant.
21. Neither the language of Section 63 of the National
Transportation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.N-17, nor any other rele
vant provision of the Railway Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.R-2, allow
for a retroactive operation.
Section 63 of the National Transportation Act has
the same words as did the former section 52 of the
Railway Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 234, in its applica
tion to the Board of Transport Commissioners for
Canada. A number of court decisions were
referred to during the argument in this appeal.
Although the facts in those cases were not simi
lar to the facts in this appeal, the corresponding
power to review and vary in the Railway Act was
considered in The Toronto Transportation Com
mission v. Canadian National Railways [1930]
S.C.R. 94, affirmed sub nom. Canadian Pacific
Railway Company v. Toronto Transportation
Commission [1930] A.C. (P.C.) 686, a decision of
long standing in which Anglin C.J., delivering the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada, said at
page 99:
By s. 51 the Board is empowered to "review, rescind, change,
alter or vary any order or decision made by it * * *." With
respect to any matter already dealt with by it, this section
enables the Board to make any order in review which it might
have made were such matter res integra. No doubt this power
should be exercised sparingly and circumspectly, as the Chief
Commissioner's judgment shews he realized. But whether cir
cumstances exist which justify its use must be a matter almost
exclusively within the Board's discretion. It is difficult to
appreciate how the exercise of this power in an order otherwise
unexceptionable can per se give rise to a question of
jurisdiction.
and Mignault J. (dissenting in other respects) said
at page 104:
Section 51 of the Railway Act enacts that
the Board may review, rescind, change, alter or vary any
order or decision made by it, or may rehear any application
before deciding it.
This language seems wide enough to allow the Board to alter
or vary its decision. Of course, as observed by Mr. Commission
er Boyce, the power to re-open or review any matter already
passed upon should not be exercised unless there is clearly a
doubt in the mind of the Board as to the correctness of the
former decision, or there be submitted new facts not before the
Board at the time the decision was made, or unless the condi
tions have changed. But this does not go to the jurisdiction of
the Board, which is the only point with which we are concerned.
And I think section 51 permitted the Board to alter its previous
decision, if it had jurisdiction otherwise to make the order
complained of.
I have no doubt that the Commission has wide
powers under the plain words of section 63 to
review, change, alter or vary a decision made by it.
One of the issues in this appeal is whether the
power to review and vary extends to the prior
determinations of the losses incurred by Canadian
Pacific on its Estevan subdivision in the years 1970
to 1974 inclusive for which payments were made.
There are similarities and differences in sections
256, 258 and 261 of the Railway Act. In respect of
claims for subsidies payable under section 256 for
actual losses of branch lines that the Commission
has determined to be uneconomic, subsection (4)
provides as follows:
256....
(4) The Commission shall examine the claim and shall
certify the amount of the actual loss, if any, that in its opinion
was attributable to the line and the Minister of Finance, on the
recommendation of the Commission, may, in respect of the loss,
cause to be paid to the company out of the Consolidated
Revenue Fund an amount not exceeding the amount of the loss
as certified by the Commission.
Section 261(4) has similar wording in respect of
claims for actual losses attributable to uneconomic
passenger train services.
Section 256 and section 261 each has a subsec
tion (6) as follows:
(6) The Commission may authorize and direct an adjustment
to be made in any payment to a railway company in one fiscal
period for or on account of an underpayment or overpayment
made under this section to that company in an earlier fiscal
period.
Another kind of subsidy was provided by section
413 of the Railway Act, and subsection (5) made
provision for adjustments by the Minister of
Finance on the recommendation of the Commis
sion for underpayments and overpayments. Sub
section (5) is as follows:
413... .
(5) The Minister of Finance on the recommendation of the
Commission may make an adjustment in any payment to a
railway company under this section or sections 256, 258, 261
and 272 in or for one year for or on account of an underpay-
ment or overpayment made under this section in an earlier
year.
It is seen that sections 256 and 261 require that
the Commission shall "certify the amount of the
actual loss .. . that in its opinion was attribut
able ..." to the branch line or passenger train
service. Section 258(2) uses somewhat different
words, namely, the actual loss of the company "as
determined by the Commission".
Another difference between sections 256 and
261 and section 258 is that section 258 does not
contain any provision for or reference to adjust
ments for prior underpayments or overpayments.
Section 63 of the National Transportation Act
is a general empowering section of long standing in
the regulation of railways.
Although the draftsman, as I have stated includ
ed provisions for adjustments of underpayments
and overpayments of subsidies in certain sections
of the Railway Act and did not include them in
section 258, I think that it should not be inferred
therefrom that the Commission's power to review
conferred in section 63 of the National Transpor
tation Act does not apply to its prior determina
tions of the losses on the Estevan subdivision in the
years 1970 to 1974.
The Commission's obligation under section 258
is to determine actual loss and to make a recom
mendation to the Minister of Finance in that
respect. If, after determining the loss, it seems to
the Commission that the amount as determined by
it was too small or too large, I think that the
Commission has power under section 63 aforesaid
to review the matter and make a new determina
tion of the loss. That is my opinion, having regard
to the objectives of the National Transportation
Act and the declaration of national transportation
policy in it, the wide range of regulatory powers
and responsibilities expressly entrusted to the
Commission by that Act and by the Railway Act,
and reading the said sections 63 and 258 in their
context and in their natural and ordinary sense.
By filing the initial claims, thereby claiming
subsidies, Canadian Pacific called for the exercise
by the Commission of its responsibility to make a
determination of the actual loss for each year and
the determination became subject to applicable
provisions of the governing statutes, including the
power of the Commission to review its determina
tions.
I express no opinion as to what remedial action
can be taken if the Committee on such a review
varies the amount of any actual loss previously
determined by it. The Committee in its decision
said that it must reject Canadian Pacific's pro
posal that it be allowed to retain all money paid to
it in respect of the subdivision. Canadian Pacific's
notice of appeal states that the Committee decided
that the company must repay the money. I do not
think that the decision goes that far. The Commit
tee's function is to determine actual loss and make
a recommendation to the Minister of Finance.
Although it seems to me that Canadian Pacific's
objection to the decision is essentially that the
Commission does not have power to review its
prior determinations of actual losses on the
Estevan subdivision for the years 1970 to 1974,
there is the company's contention that the Com
mission does not have power to order it to re-file
subsidy claims for those years.
The decision states that in order to finalize past
claims the railway companies must re-file all
claims on lines where segmentation problems now
exist, and it specifically states that claims on the
Estevan subdivision are to be re-filed for all years
claimed regardless of whether payments of subsidy
had been made.
The decision indicates that approximately $25
million in disallowances are associated with the
segmentation issue; that subsidy payments under
section 258 of the Railway Act were made for
Canadian Pacific's Estevan subdivision in respect
of the years 1970 to 1974; that this line was later
identified as a segmentation case and subsequent
claims were disallowed in total; and that the final
disposition of these past payments is a subject of
the decision.
Canadian Pacific has withdrawn its claims for
that subdivision for 1975 and subsequent years,
but has left the Committee to struggle with its
prior determinations of losses for the years 1970 to
1974. Canadian Pacific initiated the claims for
subsidies for each of those 1970 to 1974 years. The
Committee has concluded that it should review its
prior determinations of the losses.
Neither the Railway Act nor the National
Transportation Act indicates the method or proce
dure to be followed by the Commission in dis
charging its responsibility to determine actual
losses where railway companies are claiming subsi
dies for uneconomic branch lines, nor the proce
dure to be followed by the Commission in review
ing a previous determination of that kind.
The responsibility imposed upon the Commis
sion to determine actual losses carries with it such
power as is reasonably necessary for the efficient
and expeditious performance of its responsibility.
It has power to make orders applying generally or
to a particular situation. In my view, the method
and procedure must be largely left to the judg
ment, experience and expertise of the Commission.
On the material before this Court, my apprecia
tion is that the Committee, with good reason, had
concluded that it should review its determinations
of Canadian Pacific's Estevan subdivision losses
for the years 1970 to 1974, and that its task of
determining them correctly would be best served
or at least facilitated by a re-filing of claims. I
take for granted that the intention is that the
re-filed claims will include the traffic, expenses
and revenues proper to be considered in the deter
mination of actual losses. I cannot say that its
conclusion is unreasonable or that in the circum
stances the Committee did not have power to order
re-filing for that purpose.
There remains a question, raised at the hearing
of the appeal, whether prior to the issuance of the
decision, Canadian Pacific had been given a fair
chance to be heard by the Committee on the
question of its power to review its earlier determi
nations of the amounts of actual loss for which
payments had been made. The notice of appeal is
dated June 8, 1979. The decision was given on
January 22, 1979. In that interval Canadian Pacif
ic did not raise with the Committee any such
question or request to be allowed to be heard in
respect of it. No claim that there was a denial of
natural justice or unfairness was made by the
company in its memorandum of points of argu
ment filed with this Court.
On the material before the Court, I am not
persuaded that there was any such unfairness or
denial of natural justice.
I would dismiss the appeal.
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.