From: St phane
S rafin <Stephane.Serafin@uottawa.ca>
Sent: Monday 3
June 2024 16:26
To: Jack
Enman-Beech; Obligations
Subject: Re: The
SGA at the SCC
My two cents : far from surprising, but also unfortunate. The SCC
in particular does not seem to care much for interpretive solutions to legal
problems, preferring instead to make use of vague standards like
"unconscionability". This just one of many examples across many areas
of law.
From: Jack Enman-Beech <jenmanbeech@gmail.com>
Sent: June 3, 2024 10:19 AM
To: Obligations <obligations@uwo.ca>
Subject: The SGA at the SCC
Attention : courriel
externe | external email
List members may
enjoy Pine
Valley Enterprises v Earthco Soil Mixtures 2024 SCC 20. It is the first
time the Canadian Supreme Court (SCC) has engaged in a substantial discussion
of the Sale of Goods Act (SGA) in about thirty years, but moreover it
illustrates the ongoing development of our contract law. It may signal the end
of an era.
Pine Valley
required soil of a particular composition for a project. Earthco shared test
results from a particular pile of soil, R Topsoil . The test results were
preliminary and out of date, which Earthco communicated to Pine Valley and Pine
Valley understood. But facing penalties for delay in the project, Pine Valley
pressed for immediate delivery of the soil without the usual further testing
that Earthco advised. As a result, Earthco s sales agent inserted a bespoke
exclusion into their form: should Pine Valley waive its right to test soil
before shipment, Earthco would not be responsible for the quality of the
material . The R Topsoil was delivered, but it was not satisfactory and had to
be replaced. Pine Valley brought suit for breach of the statutory condition
that goods sold by description will match their description, among other
points. The SCC (and the trial judge) held that the exclusion effectively saved
Earthco from liability despite its imprecise wording.
The SCC
emphasised that "the objective intention of the parties will be the
paramount consideration" (para 60) over the technicalities of the SGA,
and that deference is owed to the trial judge on the interpretation of the
agreement, on which see the excellent work cited from Daniele Bertolini. It
being clear in context that the exclusion clause was intended to exclude just
this sort of thing the R Topsoil not matching the preliminary test results the
statutory condition was over-ridden. Certainly some remnant of that condition
remained Earthco could not have delivered soil from some other pile (and it was
not alleged that they did so). But there was an express agreement varying the
statutory conditions as conceived by s 53 of the SGA.
The history of
the case is confused by the
trial judge s conclusion that the R Topsoil was not to description and
Earthco s concession of this point on appeal as pointed out in cited work by
Clayton Bangsund. At
the Ontario Court of Appeal (ONCA), it was held that the clause avoids the
implied condition of merchantable quality, but not the implied condition
relating to sale by description. Thus the ONCA found for Pine Valley on the
basis of a broad interpretation of the implied condition and a narrow interpretation
of the exclusion clause the old covert tools used to protect buyers.
Canada has never
had the equivalent of an Unfair Contract Terms Act (UCTA)
subjecting exclusion clauses in business-to-business transactions to
reasonableness review. Perhaps for this reason, technical interpretations of
exclusion clauses have continued in a way that is out of step with the strong
preference of Canadian courts to contextualism. But as of Uber
v Heller 2020 SCC 16 (and perhaps since Tercon
v British Columbia 2010 SCC 4), unconscionability can be used to avoid
single clauses. While our jobbing conceptualists work through the breadth and
basis of this rule, it can achieve much the same thing as UCTA, even
attending to the same factors. With the fruition of unconscionability, and the
principle of good faith, perhaps our courts are free to enforce parties
agreements on their own terms.
Yours truly
&c.,
Jack
Dr John Enman-Beech