Another Canadian
appellate court has furthered the fallacy that the cause of action
to reverse an unjust enrichment is a claim in equity. It did so
in the context of an issue raised by the court itself rather than
by the parties [para. 3]. The case is Grover v. Hodgins, 2011
ONCA 72 (CanLII), available at:
http://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2011/2011onca72/2011onca72.html
Usually there are no practical consequences to whether the claim
is understood as being at common law or in equity. But in this
case it mattered, since the court hearing the claim was the Small
Claims Court. Under s. 96 of the Courts of Justice Act, that
court cannot grant equitable relief. On appeal, the Court of
Appeal for Ontario, undeterred, comes up with an analysis of that
restriction that allows that court to grant equitable relief in
certain situations.
The correct answer would be to hold that the claim was in no way
equitable and the remedy being sought did not involve equitable
relief. It was a common law claim and so squarely within the
jurisdiction of the Small Claims Court. The court mentions one
case that arrives at this correct result but does not follow its
simple approach [para. 19].
Perhaps more worrying, the court does not grapple with the
constitutional issues relating to the subject-matter jurisdiction
of the Small Claims Court. I am not a constitutional law scholar,
but I understand the argument to be that to be able to grant
equitable remedies such as an injunction, a judge has to be
federally appointed so as to have the power to do so under s. 96
of the Constitution Act 1867. The judges of the Small Claims
Court are provincially, not federally, appointed, and arguably
that explains the statutory limit on their subject matter
jurisdiction.
As something of an anticlimax, the Court of Appeal then finds that
the unjust enrichment claim fails.
Stephen
--
Dr. Stephen G.A. Pitel
Associate Professor
Goodmans LLP Faculty Fellow in Legal Ethics 2010-11
Faculty of Law, The University of Western Ontario