C.A. Finds Vendor of Spare Parts for Pool Liable for Failure to Warn

By a 2-1 margin, the Court of Appeal allowed an appeal by the plaintiffs and imposed liability on one of the defendants for a catastrophic swimming pool accident that had left a young girl a quadriplegic. In reaching its decision, the majority concluded that when employees of a pool store were asked whether it was “okay” to install a used slide with a 4-foot deep pool, the employees had a duty to warn of the risk of catastrophic injury from use of such a slide.

Walford v. Jacuzzi Canada Ltd. was an appeal from the 2005 trial decision of Mr. Justice John Cavarzan. In 1996, the plaintiff Correena Walford was 15 ¾ years old. She was making her second trip down a slide that her parents had installed the previous day beside their above-ground pool. The pool was four feet deep. The first time she descended, she had gone down feet-first. But on the second occasion, she had crouched over her knees. When she reached the bottom, she went into the water head first, struck her chin on the bottom of the pool and was rendered quadriplegic.

A number of defendants were sued, including Correena’s parents. By the time of the trial, some of the defendants had successfully moved for summary judgment and others had been let out of the action on consent. At trial, the suit had been dismissed against all remaining defendants, either on the basis that they had not been negligent or that their negligence had not caused the accident. Cavarzan J. concluded that the injury had stemmed from Correena’s “failure to heed the rules for the safe use of the slide” (including her mother’s instruction to descend the slide in a seated position). Damages were assessed at over $5 million.

The dismissal was appealed only as against the defendant Pioneer Family Pools (Hamilton) Inc. That company was the local pool store where, for the previous two years, the plaintiff’s parents had customarily bought chemicals and other supplies for their pool. In her evidence at trial, Marion Walford, the plaintiff’s mother, referred to Pioneer as, “my home base”.

As Madam Justice Kathryn Feldman characterized it, the issue on appeal was “whether the pool store breached a duty of care to the appellants by telling the mother that it was ‘okay’ and that there would be ‘no problem’ with installing the slide on their 4-foot-deep aboveground pool, without warning her of the potential for catastrophic injury, and if so, whether that breach caused or contributed to the damage that the appellant Correena Walford suffered.”

Feldman J.A. concluded that Pioneer had breached a duty owed to the plaintiffs and that its negligence had caused the injury. Justice Robert Blair concurred. Mr. Justice Paul Rouleau would have upheld the trial judge’s findings, that Pioneer had not been negligent and had not caused the plaintiff’s injuries.

Negligence of Pioneer

Mrs. Walford (the plaintiff’s mother) had spoken on four occasions with a representative of Pioneer about a slide for her above-ground pool. The first time, she was considering the acquisition of a slide and called to ask if one was available for a 4-foot deep pool. She was told that there was, but that the cost was more than $1,000 and would have to be ordered from the manufacturer.

Then, Mrs. Walford saw a classified ad in the local newspaper, for a 10-foot slide manufactured by Jacuzzi. She telephoned Pioneer Pools and asked whether it would be “okay” to use the slide with her 4-foot pool. The Pioneer employee said that she did not see any problem with this.

Mrs. Walford went ahead and purchased the used Jacuzzi slide for $225. It was old and needed some parts. She drove directly to the Barton Street branch of Pioneer Pools and spoke with the store manager, with whom she had dealt in the past. She asked the manager to inspect the slide and to advise her whether it was all right to use the slide with the 4-foot pool. The manager told her that there would be no problem. The Barton Street branch manager also referred her to another branch of Pioneer Pools to obtain some tubing for the slide.

At that Pioneer outlet, Mrs. Walford again asked the employee whether it was all right to use the slide with the 4-foot pool and was told that it would be “okay”.

Importantly, Mrs. Walford testified that if she had been told by Pioneer’s employees, that it was not safe to use the slide, she would not have installed it, even though she had already paid for it. This evidence was determinative of the appeal on the issue of causation.

Mrs. Walford had laid down rules for use of the pool by her daughter and others. These included descending the slide feet-first only.

At trial, Cavarzan J. had held that Mrs. Walford’s relationship with the Barton Street Pioneer Pools outlet might establish a special relationship giving rise to a duty of care. However, he went on to conclude that the store had met the applicable standard of care. The standard was determined to be as set out in the “U.S. Consumer Product Safety Standards” or “CPSS”. It appears that those standards would permit the use of a slide of the height of the one purchased by Mrs. Walford (6′ 6″), with a 4-foot pool, but only by persons younger than 13 years. (Correena Walford had been 15 ¾ at the time of the accident.)

The Court of Appeal treated this as a case involving not only liability for failure to warn, but also one of negligent misrepresentation.

The majority of the Court of Appeal held that the trial judge had misinterpreted the CPSS in finding that, for pools with a water depth greater than 4 feet, the CPSS would permit the use of “unrestricted slides”. Justice Feldman said that the trial judge had erroneously thought that “unrestricted” meant that a slide of any height could be used, when the term actually meant that the slide could be used by persons older than 13.

In addition, the majority of the Court of Appeal said that the trial judge had erred by referring only to the CPSS governing minimum pool depth. The Court pointed out that “[a]lthough the CPSS permitted the installation of a slide on a 4-foot-deep pool, that permission was qualified in the CPSS by many safety requirements concerning the risk of serious injury and instructions for reducing that risk. The standard contains an extensive discussion of the dangers of swimming pool slides.”

But all of this analysis about water depth and slide height seems to have been largely beside the point, from the perspective of the Court of Appeal. The majority reproduced, in considerable detail, various commentaries that apparently accompanied the CPSS in the United States (having been created under the authority of the United States Consumer Product Safety Act). Those commentaries highlighted the dangers of using a pool slide in a face-forward orientation, including paraplegia and quadriplegia. The majority in the Court of Appeal held that, “the accepted standard for pool slides involved more than simply a consideration of minimum pool depths. The standard [CPSS] included many other safety requirements, the most important of which is the mandatory provision of information and instructions concerning the extreme and non-obvious danger of paralysis if a slide is used improperly”. This conclusion was based on the further finding, that the use of a slide with a 4-foot pool gives rise to a “hidden danger”.

Given the relationship between Mrs. Walford and the Barton Street Pioneer Pools outlet, the majority in the Court of Appeal determined that the store’s employees had been negligent in having failed to warn her of the hidden danger of catastrophic injury resulting from erecting a slide for use with a 4-foot pool. By failing to incorporate this obligation as part of the applicable standard of care, the trial judge had, said the majority, erred in law.

Causation

The majority also said that Cavarzan J. had erred in his causation analysis. Applying the “but for” test recently reaffirmed by the Supreme Court of Canada in Resurfice Corp. v. Hanke, he should have accepted “Mrs. Walford’s uncontroverted and unchallenged evidence..that had she been warned by Pioneer Pools about the danger of using a slide with a 4-foot pool…she would not have erected the slide, even after buying it”.

The Court did apportion 20 percent contributory negligence to Correena for having disobeyed her mother’s instructions to slide feet first only.

Rouleau J.’s Dissent

Justice Rouleau would have dismissed the appeal, both on the issues of standard of care and causation.

He felt that key findings made by the trial judge with respect to standard of care were factual in nature and that there was no basis upon which the Court of Appeal could interfere. He did not accept that Mrs. Walford’s questions about whether it was “okay” to use the slide rose to the level of enquiries about safety precautions that should be taken. (However, he did acknowledge that if her questions could reasonably have been understood in that way, then Pioneer’s answers had been negligently given.)

Rouleau J.A. noted that Pioneer’s employees were not experts in slides and had no special knowledge or skill. He pointed out that the standard of care is lower for distributors than for manufacturers and that “[i]t follows that the standard for a vendor of replacement parts will usually be lower still, since the vendor of replacement parts would not normally be expected to have the knowledge available to manufacturers or distributors or to advise customers respecting the proper use of the product.” He felt that the employees had met the standard of care relative to the question asked of them (“Is it okay?”)

Even if Pioneer had failed to meet the standard of care, Justice Rouleau would have dismissed the appeal on the basis of causation. He said that the trial judge had rejected (albeit by implication) Mrs. Walford’s evidence, that she would not have installed the slide, had she been told of risks associated with its use. Justice Rouleau observed that on the information she did have, Mrs. Walford was aware that the slide was dangerous if used improperly, but she went ahead and installed it anyway. Without referring specifically to the “but for” test, the trial judge had correctly applied it in concluding that the accident would have occurred even if appropriate warnings had been given by Pioneer.

Finally, Justice Rouleau disagreed with the majority’s interpretation of the standard of review in Housen v. Nikolaisen. He noted that the trial judge’s findings of negligence should not be disturbed, absent “palpable and overriding error”. Since no such error had been made, the appeal should fail.

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S.C.C. Allows Appeals in Herbison and Vytlingam

Good news for auto insurers today from the Supreme Court. The insurers’ appeals in Citadel General Assurance Co. v. Vytlingam and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. v. Herbison were successful. Both cases turned on the interpretation of the phrase, “arising directly or indirectly from the use or operation of an automobile”. Today’s rulings will dictate a considerably narrower interpretation than the one applied by the Ontario Court of Appeal. The Supreme Court also distinguished its own earlier decision in Amos v. Insurance Corp. of British Columbia, whose two-part test has hitherto been the Rosetta stone in “ownership, use or operation cases”.

Both of today’s rulings were made by a unanimous court, in which the reasons were written by Mr. Justice Binnie.

Vytlingam

In this case, the plaintiff Michael Vytlingam had been catastrophically injured when the car in which he was driving was struck by a boulder thrown from a North Carolina overpass by “two local thrill seekers…high on alcohol and drugs”. The miscreants had driven to the overpass in a car that had liability insurance limits of only US$25,000 (a very small amount these days!)

The issue before the court was whether Vytlingam and his family, who were Ontario residents, were entitled to access their “underinsured motorist” insurance coverage (OPCF-44R). The answer to that question, in turn, depended on whether the injury to Vytlingam had arisen, “directly or indirectly from the use or operation of an automobile”.

Amos v. Insurance Corp. of B.C.

In both Vytlingam and Herbison, the Court of Appeal had relied on an earlier ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada in Amos v. Insurance Corp. of British Columbia. An important consequence of today’s decisions is that Amos is to be read more narrowly than lower courts have done to date.

The Amos case involved a dispute over no fault benefits and the Supreme Court had had to interpret the phrase, “in respect of death or injury caused by an accident that arises out of the ownership, use or operation of a vehicle”. Justice Major had devised a two-part “relaxed causation” test, which has been widely applied ever since.

The first part of the Amos test addresses “purpose”: Did the accident result from the ordinary and well-known activities to which automobiles are put?

The second element is the “causation” requirement: Is there some nexus of causal relationship (not necessarily a direct or proximate causal relationship) between the plaintiff’s injuries and the ownership, use or operation of his vehicle, or is the connection between the injuries and the ownership, use or operation of the vehicle merely incidental or fortuitous?

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C.A. Encourages Auto Insurers to Make Offers Without Applying IA Deductible

Cushion.jpg Some very good news for the plaintiff’s bar today, from the Court of Appeal: insurers’ offers to settle in MVA cases should contain “cushions” against the statutory deductibles.

In Rider et al. v. Dydyk, the Court (Justices Jurianz, MacPherson and Sharpe) overruled the Divisional Court’s decision in Wicken v. Harssar. The latter case had held that for purposes of evaluating whether or not an offer to settle engaged the costs consequences of Rule 49, the court should consider the net award to the plaintiff, after applying the deductibles mandated by Rule 3 of s. 267.5(7) of the Insurance Act. That is no longer the law; the Court of Appeal has now held that in assessing offers to settle under Rule 49, the statutory deductibles are not to be taken into account.

In this case, the defendant had offered to settle, under Rule 49, by payment of $5,000 to each of two plaintiffs, together with prejudgment interest and costs. Following an 11-day trial before a jury, after applying the then-applicable deductibles of $15,000 for the injured parties and $7,500 to Family Law Act claimants, the net amount of the award was $5,000.

The defendant argued that it was entitled to costs because the judgment was more favourable to it than was its offer to settle. The plaintiffs contended that the deductibles should not be taken into account for purposes of this analysis and that when the pre-deductible amount of the jury award was considered, the award was more favourable than the offer.

The trial judge had refused to award costs to the defendant. He relied on s. 267.5(9) of the Insurance Act, which he referred to as “the saving provision”. It reads as follows:

In an action for loss or damage from bodily injury or death arising directly or indirectly from the use or operation of an automobile, the determination of a party’s entitlement to costs shall be made without regard to the effect of paragraph 3 of subsection (7) [the deductibles] on the amount of damages, if any, awarded for non-pecuniary loss.

(The Court of Appeal’s reasons do not indicate what costs, if any, were awarded by the trial judge, but the plaintiffs had been seeking costs totalling $176,188.40.)

The Court of Appeal acknowledged that the trial judge had failed to apply the Divisional Court’s decision in Wicken, but then held that the latter case was wrongly-decided.

In Wicken, the Divisional Court had rejected the argument, that s. 267.5(9) of the Insurance Act means that insurers should “cushion” their offers by $15,000 per injured claimant in order to trigger Rule 49 costs consequences. In today’s ruling by the Court of Appeal, this argument found favour:

[I]nterpreting s. 267.5(9) to require that insurance companies “cushion” their offers to plaintiffs by $15,000 in order to rely on Rule 49 is not, as I see it, an “arbitrary benefit” to plaintiffs. Rather, such an interpretation encourages insurance companies to make offers of settlement that are based on an assessment of the damages actually suffered by the plaintiff. Offers of settlement that fairly reflect the plaintiff’s actual damages, without deduction, will encourage settlement. Plaintiffs with small claims who have received such offers will be faced with the choice of proceeding to trial where the statutory deductible of $15,000 will reduce any judgment they might obtain and settling and avoiding the certain elimination of all or a large part of their damages.

The Court of Appeal did not comment on the fact that as of October 1, 2003, the deductibles under the Insurance Act were increased, to $30,000 for injured persons and $15,000 for FLA claimants. Applying the Court’s reasoning to a contemporary claim, the “cushion” that an insurer will now have to build into its offers is much larger. Thus, in a typical case involving the so-called “nuclear family” (two parents and two children), where one family member is injured and the others have FLA claims, the insurer would have to offer $75,000 more than the plaintiffs recover at trial, in order to get any protection from Rule 49!

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C.A. Says Insurance Act Bars All Auto Tort Claims for Property Damage

In a case that has already received a lot of attention from the insurance industry, the Court of Appeal held in Clarendon National Insurance et al. v. Candow that where it applies, s. 263 of the Insurance Act bars all tort claims for property damage consequent upon an automobile accident. In this case, a U.S. driver and his insurer, which had not signed an undertaking to be subject to the provisions of the Ontario Insurance Act, were nevertheless prevented from pursuing a claim for property damage against the owner and driver of the other vehicle involved in a collision.

This case arose out of a 2004 collision on Highway 401. One plaintiff (“Bounthai”) was driving a tractor for a Texas trucking company. The other plaintiff, Clarendon National Insurance, was the physical damage insurer of the truck. (A different insurer, American Home Assurance, carried the liability coverage.) In this action, Bounthai and Clarendon sued the defendants in negligence, seeking reimbursement for the cost of repairing the tractor. (The claim was for about $20,000.)

In their defence, the defendants relied on s. 263 of the Insurance Act. Subsection 5 of that section prohibits suits in tort “against any person involved in the incident other than the insured’s insurer for damages to the insured’s automobile or its contents or for loss of use”. Actions in contract are also prohibited by the section, except those brought “under an agreement, other than a contract of automobile insurance”. (The Court of Appeal gave as an example of the latter a lease agreement that requires the lessee to return the vehicle in an undamaged state. It said that an action to enforce such a provision would not be barred by s. 263.)

For section 263 to apply, three requirements must be met:

  1. The automobile or its contents, or both, must suffer damage arising directly or indirectly from the use or operation in Ontario of one or more other automobiles;
  2. The automobile that suffers the damage (or the contents of which are damaged) must be insured under a motor vehicle liability policy issued by an insurer licensed in Ontario or that has filed with the Superintendent an undertaking to be bound by section 263; and
  3. At least one other automobile involved in the accident must be insured under a motor vehicle liability policy issued by an insured licensed in Ontario or that has filed with the Superintendent an undertaking to be bound by section 263.

The idea of the legislation was to establish a “knock for knock” system, whereby insurers would give up the right to sue other companies’ insureds for subrogated property claims, but would also be immune from such suits themselves. All companies would save the transactional costs associated with a tort system. In place of such claims, the system created by s. 263 substituted a first-party compensation scheme, but expressly provided that “an insured is entitled to recover for the damages to the insured’s automobile and its contents and for loss of use from the insured’s insurer under the coverage described in subsection 239 (1) as though the insured were a third party“.

Non-Ontario insurers can “opt into” this system by providing to the Superintendent an undertaking to be bound by s. 263. (A list of insurers that have signed the undertaking can be found here and the actual wording of the undertaking itself here.)

Insurers that sign the undertaking receive both the benefit and the burden of the scheme.

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Div. Ct. Says Defence Medical, Surveillance Report from Tort Claim Can’t Be Used in Subsequent AB Litigation

In Kitchenham v. AXA Insurance Canada, the Divisional Court has considered the “deemed undertaking” rule (Rule 30.1.01) in the context of personal injury litigation. The decision of the Court was written by Associate Chief Justice Douglas Cunningham, concurred in by Justices James Kent and Charles Hackland. The ruling takes a restrictive view of the obligation to disclose in one proceeding evidence obtained in another, even when both involve the same plaintiff and arise out of the same incident.

The plaintiff had been injured in a 1993 motor vehicle accident. She had brought a previous action for damages in tort. That action had been settled in 2000. She commenced a second lawsuit (this one), in 1996. In it, she sued for accident benefits arising out of the 1993 accident.

The defendant in the prior lawsuit had obtained an independent medical report (“IME”). It had also undertaken surveillance of the plaintiff. AXA Insurance, the defendant in the AB action, sought disclosure and production of those documents.

AXA’s original motion was heard by Justice Thomas Heeney. He ordered that the documents had to be disclosed to AXA by the plaintiff but that the use to be made of them was to be determined by the trial judge.

The plaintiff appealed from the decision requiring disclosure of the documents and AXA cross-appealed from the restriction imposed by Heeney J. on the use that could be made of the documents.

The Divisional Court allowed the appeal and dismissed the cross-appeal. Its reasons will be instructive for practitioners in this area.

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Master Orders Plaintiff to Produce Identical Copy of Hard Drive From Which Some of Its Productions Had Been Taken

Hummingbird v. Mustafa et al. involved some interesting issues in the evolving law of “e-discovery”.

The defendants asked the court to order production of the hard drive of a computer that the defendant Mustafa had used while in the employ of the plaintiff Hummingbird. Some of Hummingbird’s productions in the litigation had come from that hard drive.

Master Sproat granted the order, noting that the definition of “document” in subrule 30.01 of the Rules of Civil Procedure was broad enough to include the hard drive itself. The Master considered the request for production of the hard drive to be “tantamount to a request to review an original of a production, which is permitted by rule 30.04 of the Rules”.

Other factors that the Master thought were significant included:

  • Having an original of the hard drive would enable the defendants to inspect the documents without disclosing to the plaintiff what they were examining or their strategy;
  • With the hard drive, the defendants could conduct tests to see if the drive had been altered in any way;
  • The cost of redacting non-relevant documents would be high and the exercise time-consuming, making it more efficient to have the hard drive itself produced. There was no evidence in this case to suggest that non-relevant documents on the drive were particularly sensitive;
  • However, should Hummingbird wish to redact documents, it could do so, at its own expense;
  • Once a document had been determined to be relevant, the “metadata” in relation to that document should also be produced. (“Metadata” is information about a document that does not appear on the document itself, but is stored on the computer. Examples are: the date and time the document was created, by whom, when the file was last accessed, when it was last printed, etc.)

The order that metadata be produced is an interesting one. If this order is valid in principle, why would a party not have to produce metadata in relation to all relevant electronic documents, in every case?

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Notice of Intention to File Medical Reports, Business Records Must Be Given Even to Defendant Noted in Default

In Vointsev v. Irina International Tours Limited, Justice Julie Alexandra Thorburn had to deal with an interesting practice point.

The plaintiff had claimed damages resulting from having fallen while on a tour of Toronto with the defendant, Irina International Tours Limited. The defendant had been noted in default.

At trial, counsel for the plaintiff sought to introduce into evidence various hospital records, medical reports, clinical notes and records and an ambulance call report. A number of the records emanated from Russia, where the plaintiff had been treated following the injury.

(Justice Thorburn held that a report from a Russian doctor was not admissible in any event, as s. 52 of the Evidence Act only applies to reports of doctors licensed or registered to practise in Canada.)

No notice under ss. 35 or 52 of the Evidence Act had been served on the defendant and the central issue in the decision was whether notice has to be served on a defendant who has been noted in default.

Counsel for the plaintiff took the position that subrule 19.02 of the Rules of Civil Procedure made it unnecessary for him to serve notice. That provision reads:

(3) Despite any other rule, a defendant who has been noted in default is not entitled to notice of any step in the action and need not be served with any document in the action, except where the court orders otherwise or where a party requires the personal attendance of the defendant…

Justice Thorburn held that subrule 19.02 was contradictory of ss. 35 and 52 of the Evidence Act, which require that notice of intention to file medical reports (s. 52) or business records (s. 35) be given to the opposing party. As a result, she refused to allow the documents into evidence:

Because Rule 19 conflicts with the requirement in the Evidence Act to serve a Notice of Intention to rely on the documents in question, I have no choice but to deny the Plaintiff’s request to admit these documents as evidence at trial because the mandatory provisions in the Evidence Act prevail over the provisions in Rule 19 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. The Plaintiff is not permitted to rely on the report of the Russian doctor, as the report is not a medical report of a doctor licensed or registered to practice in Canada and therefore does not satisfy the requirements of section 52 of the Evidence Act.

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Insurer Must Defend Lessor Although Car Driven by Excluded Driver

As if insurers needed more encouragement to tighten their procedures, the Court of Appeal today ordered Lombard Insurance to defend an action arising out of use of a car by an “excluded driver” because the insurer had not delivered a copy of the endorsement to the leasing company which owned the vehicle. The case is GMAC Leaseco v. Lombard Insurance.

The car had been leased from GMAC Leaseco by Angelique Saweczko and Marc O’Neil Powell. Both had signed an OPCF 28A Excluded Driver Endorsement form, which stated that there would be no coverage under the policy whenever Powell was operating the vehicle.

GMAC Leaseco had been provided with certificates of insurance that noted that such an endorsement had been issued. However, Lombard did not deliver the endorsement itself to GMAC Leaseco, nor was there any evidence that GMAC knew that Powell was an excluded driver.

Powell was involved in an accident while driving the car and GMAC Leaseco was sued as the vehicle’s owner. Lombard denied coverage, relying on the OPCF 28A form, and had itself added as a statutory third party. GMAC Leaseco applied to court for an order requiring Lombard to defend it. At first instance, its motion was dismissed. But the Court of Appeal overturned that dismissal and ordered Lombard to defend and indemnify GMAC Leaseco.

The Court held that s. 232(3) of the Insurance Act requires an insurer to deliver or mail to the insured a true copy of every endorsement or other amendment to the contract. Sending a certificate to GMAC Leaseco was not enough and did not comply with the statute.

Insurers should bear in mind that this decision is not limited to this particular endorsement; it interprets the Insurance Act to require that all endorsements must be sent to the insured.

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C.A. Says UIM Coverage Applies to “Every Person Who Is Entitled to Statutory Accident Benefits”

In McArdle v. Bugler, the Court of Appeal today held that a passenger in an uninsured vehicle, which had collided with another vehicle, was entitled to uninsured motorist insurance coverage applying to the second car. It held that the narrow definition of “person insured under the contract” in s. 265 of the Insurance Act must give way to the more broadly-worded definition of “insured” in s. 224 of the Act.

Section 265 of the Act (which is the section that provides for uninsured motorist coverage) defines “person insured under the contract” as “the insured and his or her spouse and any dependant relative of either,…while an occupant of an uninsured automobile”.

Section 224, on the other hand, is of more general application. It defines “insured”, for purposes of Part VI (Automobile Insurance), to mean, “a person insured by a contract whether named or not and includes every person who is entitled to statutory accident benefits under the contract whether or not described therein as an insured person”. [Emphasis added] This leads us to the definition of “insured person” in the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule for Accidents On or After November 1, 1996″. The latter definition includes, “in respect of accidents in Ontario, a person who is involved in an accident involving the insured automobile”. Applying these two definitions to this case, it was acknowledged by all parties, that the plaintiff would be an “insured person” for purposes of entitlement to statutory accident benefits and therefore, would fit within the definition of “insured” in s. 224.

In reaching its decision, the Court of Appeal applied one of its previous rulings, Taggart (Litigation Guardian of) v. Simmons (2001), 52 O.R. (3d) 704. In that case, the Court had upheld the dismissal of a motion for summary judgment by a passenger in an uninsured automobile who had claimed uninsured and underinsured coverage under a policy owned by a man with whom the plaintiff was living and who was evidently a surrogate father, of sorts. The Court of Appeal held in that case, if the plaintiff could show that he was a “dependent” of the surrogate father, he would be covered.

The Court had been asked, in McArdle, to overturn its decision in Taggart. However, it declined to do so.

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Court of Appeal Considers Apportionment of Fault in Multi-accident Cases

The Ontario Court of Appeal today released a decision dealing with apportionment of fault in tort. In Misko v. John Doe, a unanimous court (Justices Marc Rosenberg, wrote the reasons that were concurred in by Justices Eleanor Cronk and Eileen Gillese) dismissed an appeal from the decision of Justice John DeSotti. We commented on that ruling when it came out, expressing the view that it had been correctly decided. The Court of Appeal said that it agreed with Justice DeSotti’s conclusion but “for somewhat different reasons”.

We prefer Justice DeSotti’s original analysis.

Unfortunately, although the Court of Appeal’s reasons seem, at first glance, to include an analysis of the operation of s. 1 of the Negligence Act, the result hinged entirely on one particular fact that had the effect of neutralizing the operation of s. 1. Thus, it seems to us that this decision will not be of much help in future cases.

The Court of Appeal’s reasons also made no reference at all to the careful analysis of Pattillo J. in Veffer v. Feldman earlier this year, who disagreed with the reasons of DeSotti J. in Misko. We didn’t agree with Justice Pattillo’s conclusion, but his analysis was a considered one and it would have been helpful to have the Court of Appeal’s comments on it.

The Misko case concerns the recurrent and difficult problems that arise when the same plaintiff has been injured in the course of tortious events separated in time (typically, two or more car accidents). That was the situation here. The plaintiff was injured in an accident in 2001, when his vehicle collided with one operated by De Bruin. A little less than a year later, the same plaintiff was involved in a second accident, this time with an unidentified automobile. In both accidents, the plaintiff’s injuries were to his neck and back.

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