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MUNICIPAL
LIABLITY ISSUES AND
WEST NILE VIRUS – AN UPDATE
by
Charles M.K. Loopstra
Introduction
In
the first article on Municipal Liability Issues and West Nile Virus,
we conducted a review of private law and statutory duties relating to
this issue. We pointed out a distinction between those municipalities
that operate a health unit that are mandated to control the spread of
the West Nile Virus ("WNV") pursuant to the Health Protection
and Promotion Act ("HPPA")
and Regulation 231/03, and those that do not.
For
those municipalities that do not operate a health unit, they are not subject
to the requirements of the HPPA, but they have the power to regulate
public nuisances as well as regulating with respect to the health, safety
and well being of the inhabitants of the municipality pursuant to s. 128(1)
of the Municipal Act, 2001. However,
they must do so without negligence.
Finally,
we reviewed the various private law duties which may expose the municipality
to risk. We concluded that if a reasonable warning is given of the potential
harm, assuming that there is no operational negligence in carrying out
any policy decisions adopted by the municipality with respect to WNV,
the courts are not likely to find liability in these circumstances.
The
Eliopoulos Case
At
the time of the writing of the first article, Justice Spiegel of the Ontario
Superior Court had allowed a $75,000,000.00 group action lawsuit launched
by 40 families claiming that the Province of Ontario was negligent in
its handling of WNV to proceed to trial.The
decision was with respect to a motion under Rule 21 of the Ontario Rules
of Civil Procedure seeking to dismiss the claim on the basis that
the pleadings disclosed no reasonable cause of action.
On
October 28, 2004, Justice Pitt of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice,
on an Application by the Ontario Minister of Health and Long Term Care,
granted leave to appeal the decision of Justice Spiegel.
Justice Pitt found that there were conflicting decisions on the issue
of whether a public authority could be found liable in tort for preventing
the spread of a disease and he felt that it was desirable to grant leave
to resolve this issue. He also found there were good reasons to doubt
the correctness of the order made by Justice Spiegel because of her failure
to analyze two statutes that were applicable.
The
Divisional Court Decision
The
Ontario Divisional Court heard the matter on April 18, 2005 and released
its judgment on June 3, 2005. The Divisional Court upheld the decision
of Justice Spiegel refusing to dismiss the action against the Province
of Ontario on a Rule 21 motion. As previously stated, on such a motion
the court must only be satisfied, assuming all the facts are true, that
it is plain and obvious that the pleadings disclose no reasonable cause
of action. As such, the decision of Justice Spiegel and the Ontario Divisional
Court is not determinative of the merits of the group’s allegations against
the Province of Ontario.
In
dismissing the appeal, the Divisional Court concluded:
a) Justice
Spiegel properly exercised her function with respect to Rule 21 motions;
b) the
threshold for resisting a Rule 21 motion is quite low. The Rule is
primarily to be used as a mechanism for preventing abuses of process
and even a "germ" or "scintilla" of a cause of
action will suffice to maintain the claim;
c) it
was at least reasonably arguable that the Province owed a duty of
care to the Plaintiffs;
d) the
provisions of the HPPA could reasonably support the Plaintiffs’
position, subject to the meeting of the Anns test;
e) the
HPPA confers wide powers on the government and local boards
to make policy decisions and to make and implement operational decisions,
sufficient to find a private law duty of care if the Anns test
is met and if it can be held that the alleged negligent acts and omissions
of the government arose as a result of the government implementing
policy at the operational level.
Mitchell Distinguished
In
Mitchell (Litigation Administrator of) v. Ontario,
the Ontario Divisional Court, on a Rule 21 motion, dismissed the Plaintiffs’
claim for damages as a result of the death of an infant while receiving
care at the hospital emergency department. The Plaintiffs alleged that
the child did not receive proper treatment quickly enough and that the
overcrowded conditions were caused by reductions in hospital funding and
restructuring decisions by the Province of Ontario. The Plaintiffs alleged
negligence, breach of contract, abuse of public office and breach of fiduciary
duties.
In
Mitchell, the Plaintiffs did not allege that the Province directly
caused physical harm to the deceased, rather it was argued that the funding
cuts and restructuring caused delay, which in turn was the cause of her
death. The court concluded that this was not a claim that falls within
one of the recognized categories of duty of care as listed by the Supreme
Court of Canada in Cooper v. Hobart
which includes the following categories:
a) where
the defendant’s act forseeably causes physical harm to the plaintiff
or the defendant’s property;
b) negligent
misstatement;
c) misfeasance
in public office;
d) where
a duty to warn of the risk of danger has been recognized;
e) where
a province has undertaken a policy of road maintenance; and
f) relational
economic loss related to a contract’s performance.
The
court therefore concluded that it must be determined whether a new duty
of care should be recognized and whether it is "just and fair"
to impose such a duty. The court concluded that:
Therefore,
a consideration of the statutory framework makes it clear that the
requisite proximity in the relationship between the plaintiffs and
the defendant has not been established so as to give rise to a private
law duty of care. The overall scheme of the relevant Acts confers
a mandate on the Minister of Health to act in the broader public interest
and does not create a duty of care to a particular patient. Similarly,
any power over funding that the Premier might have is a power to be
exercised in the public interest.
In
Eliopoulos, the Divisional Court concluded that:
Unlike
in Mitchell, it was not necessary for the motion judge to determine
whether a new duty of care should be recognized. Nor is it necessary
for us to do so. The respondents’ claims, as pleaded, fall within
the scope of a traditionally recognized category, namely, circumstances
that disclose reasonably foreseeable harm and proximity sufficient
to establish a prima facie duty of care.
In
making this finding, the Divisional Court noted that the Plaintiffs had
pleaded that the Province had caused physical harm to the deceased plaintiff,
that the Province was negligent and that the negligence contributed to
the death of the deceased plaintiff and that the Province made a policy
decision with respect to implementing the Plan to reduce the risk of contracting
WNV for Ontario residents and then breached its duty to carry out the
Plan in a non-negligent fashion.
Lessons
from Eliopoulos
It
is clear from Eliopoulos that the courts will rarely strike a cause
of action on a Rule 21 motion where the defendant must show that it is
plain, obvious and beyond doubt that the plaintiff could not succeed.
To a large extent the creativity of the plaintiff’s lawyer in preparing
the pleading will make the difference on a Rule 21 motion. The allegations
of fact in the statement of claim, unless patently ridiculous or incapable
of proof, must be accepted as proven and a claim will not be dismissed
simply because it is novel. Moreover, the statement of claim must be read
generously with an allowance for inadequacies due to drafting deficiencies.
The
Merits of Eliopoulos
In
Eliopoulos, the Province argued that it has no duty of care to
the plaintiff because:
a) there is
no statutory duty on the Province to prevent the spread of WNV;
b) there is
no relationship or proximity between the parties;
c) the
plaintiffs seek compensation for policy decisions made by the Province
that are not actionable; and
d) there
are important policy reasons why liability should not be imposed.
In
its factum to the Divisional Court, the Province argued that the three
statutes that could govern the Province’s responsibility with respect
to WNV do not disclose that the legislature intended to provide a private
remedy in the form of compensation to individuals such as the plaintiffs.
As such, the acts imposed broad public law duties only when setting out
responsibilities for public health and conferring broad discretionary
powers on the Minister and other provincial officials to take steps in
the interest of the public at large. They do not impose duties in the
nature of private law duties that are actionable.
Under
the HPPA, the Minister is empowered to take steps in a variety
of areas but is under no statutory duty to take any specific steps in
any specified circumstances. The Minister’s oversight of the local boards
of health is within his/her discretion as are his/her decisions with respect
to public laboratories of health and decisions about public health risks.
The Province argued that the HPPA provides for multiple and flexible
means to reduce health risks, but does not purport to eliminate the risk
of illness or disease to specific members of the public, such as the plaintiff.
The Province also argued that the HPPA provides that the boards
of health are separate suable entities and can be liable in tort for any
negligence on the part of any of their members. There is nothing in the
Act that makes Ontario responsible in law for those matters assigned to
the local boards of health.
The
statutory framework under the HPPA is similar to that of the Police
Services Act. Under that Act, the
day-to-day operations of municipal police forces are delegated to the
municipalities. In Odhavji Estate v. Woodhouse,
the Supreme Court of Canada concluded that the statutory framework could
not impose a private law duty of care on Ontario in relation to the supervision
and training of municipal police forces, as those responsibilities are
vested in another agency.
The
Province also argued that there is an insufficient degree of proximity
between the plaintiff and the Province to establish a private law duty
of care and that a private law duty of care cannot be owed to the general
public or to a large undefined class of people. The statutory powers exercisable
and the broad public interest did not give rise to a private law duty
of care in the absence of a "special relationship of proximity"
between the parties.
In
the Rule 21 motion, Justice Spiegel had found that the identification
of "hot spots" being geographical areas where birds infected
with WNV were detected formed the basis for a special relationship of
proximity. This would suggest that the identification of "hot spots"
would lead to the creation of a "special group" owed a private
law duty of care by Ontario to prevent WNV. The Province argued that the
"hot spots" analysis disregards the fact that the local boards
of health, rather than Ontario, undertakes surveillance of dead birds
and makes decisions as to what measures might be put in place to respond
to the finding.
The
Province has strong arguments on the merits that it should not be found
liable. On the other hand, the courts appear to be reaching for new private
law duties in the context of serious threats to public health and welfare.
At the very least, the threshold for taking a case to trial appears to
be relatively low. If at trial, there is a finding of a breach of a private
law duty to the plaintiff, the test for causation as laid down by the
Supreme Court of Canada in these types of cases is whether the defendant’s
negligence materially contributed to the occurrence of the injury.
Are
Municipalities the Next Defendant?
Eliopoulos
did not name local boards of health or municipalities as defendants.
Clearly, such defendants would be more likely at risk for negligently
carrying out an operational duty. However, the plaintiff must plead the
particulars of the negligence and, at trial, prove, on a balance of probability,
that the negligent act caused or materially contributed to the occurrence
of the injury.
One
case that may be of interest is a class action suit involving SARS brought
against all three levels of government, including the City of Toronto.
All three defendants brought Rule 21 motions on the basis that each defendant
does not owe a private law duty to the plaintiff. The motion has been
argued and no decision has been released. The City of Toronto has argued:
a) the
City owes no private law duty of care to the plaintiff and it is not
enough to simply plead that such a duty is owed;
b) the
City of Toronto Act, 1997 (No. 2)
("COT") and the HPPA pleaded by the plaintiff
do not give rise to a private law duty of care;
c) although
the City under the COT and the HPPA establishes a local
board of health, the board is a separate legal entity under ss. 52(1)
of the HPPA;
d) the
Province, not the City, has oversight powers over the board; and
e) a
local board of health is not a statutory agent or servant of the City
and the City is not liable for its negligent or wrongful acts.
As
a practical matter, even if the City of Toronto is successful on its Rule
21 motion, subject to any limitation periods, a separate cause of action
may exist against the Toronto Health Unit. Generally, these boards or
health units are funded and insured by the municipality.
Conclusion
There
is no doubt that where there is a serious risk to public health (WNV,
SARS, tainted blood), the courts are inclined to give the injured party
every opportunity to pursue a legal remedy. However, the legal remedy
must be founded on the breach of a private law duty of care and the breach
must be found to have caused or materially contributed to the injury.
No doubt, the courts will be defining these areas further in the context
of WNV.
- September 2004,
Vol. 5, No. 6
- R.S.O. 1990, c.H.
7
- S.O. 2001, c.
25
- Eliopoulos
v. Ontario (Minister of Health and Long Term Care), [2004] O.J.
No. 3035
- Eliopoulos
v. Ontario (Minister of Health and Long Term Care),
[2004] O.J. No. 4396
- Ministry of
Health and Long Term Care Act,
R.S.O. 1990, c.M. 26 and Pesticides Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.P. 11
- Eliopoulos
v. Ontario (Minister of Health &Long Term Care),
[2005] O.J. No. 2225
- (2004), 71 O.R.
(3d) 571
- [2001] 3 S.C.R.
537
- R.S.O. 1990, c.P.
15
- [2003], 3 S.C.R.
263
- Doe v. Metropolitan
Toronto (Municipality) Commissioners of Police
(1990), 58 D.L.R. (4th) 580
- Walker Estate
v. York Finch General Hospital,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 647
- Williams v.
AG (Canada) et al.,
Court File No. 03-CV-259366 CP
- S.O. 1997, c.
26

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