Thursday, May 3, 2012

Federal Court of Canada Citation: 2012 FC 499 Docket: T-463-07


Date: 20120501

Docket: T-463-07

Citation: 2012 FC 499

Ottawa, Ontario, May 1, 2012


BETWEEN:

DENNIS MANUGE

Plaintiff

and

HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN

Defendant

REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER

[1] This is a Class proceeding brought by the Plaintiff, Dennis Manuge, on behalf of

approximately 4,500 former members of the Canadian Forces (the Class).

[2] What is in issue in the proceeding is the legality of the Defendant’s policy of reducing longterm

disability (LTD) benefits payable to disabled Canadian Forces (CF) members under the CF

Service Income Security Insurance Plan (SISIP) Policy 901102 by the monthly amounts payable to

those members under the
Pension Act, RSC 1985, c P-6. The Class argues that this offset of

benefits is not contractually justified and that it also violates section 15(1) of the
Canadian Charter

Page: 2

of Rights and Freedoms
, Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act

1982
(UK), 1982, c 11.

[3] To their credit, the parties have agreed to have the contractual aspect of their dispute

resolved on a preliminary basis by way of a motion brought under Rule 220 of the Federal Courts

Rules, SOR/98-106 [Rules]. To that end, they have submitted an Agreed Statement of Facts and

have posed the following questions of law for determination:

1. Are the pension payments made pursuant to section 21 of the

Pension Act
, “total monthly income benefits” as that term is

described in section 24(a)(iv) of Part III(B) of SISIP Policy

901102?

2. Are the pension payments made pursuance to section 21 of

the
Pension Act, “monthly pay in effect on the date of release

from the Canadian Forces” as that term is described in

section 23(a) of Part III(B) of SISIP Policy 901102?

[4] Central to the dispute is the interpretation of Article 24 of the SISIP Policy and, in particular,

whether monthly benefits payable to disabled CF members under the
Pension Act are “monthly

income benefits” as that phrase is used in the SISIP Policy. The relevant provision reads as follows:

24. Other Relevant Sources of

Income

a. The monthly benefit payable

at Section 23 shall be

reduced by the sum of:

(i) the monthly income

benefits payable to the

member under the

Canadian Forces

24. Autres sources de revenu

a. Le montant de la prestation

mensuelle versée selon

l’article 23 doit être réduit

du total des montants

suivant :

(i) de la prestation de

revenu mensuelle versée

au membre en vertu de

la Loi sur la pension de

Page: 3

Superannuation Act; and

(ii) the Primary monthly

income benefits payable

to the member under the

Canada or Quebec

Pension Plans (including

retroactive payments

covering the period

during which such

benefits were prefunded

under this Division 2);

and

(iii) the employment income

of the member unless

the member is

participating in a

rehabilitation program

approved by the Insurer

in which case the

monthly benefit will be

reduced in accordance

with Section 28; and

(iv) the total monthly income

benefits payable to the

member under the

Pension Act (including

dependant benefits and

retroactive payments

covering the period

during which such

benefits were prefunded

under this Division 2).

retraite des Forces

canadiennes; et

(ii) de la prestation de

revenu mensuelle versée

au membre en vertu du

Régime des pensions du

Canada ou de la Régie

des rentes du Québec (y

compris les versements

rétroactifs pour la

période pendant laquelle

ces prestations ont été

financées en vertu de la

présente section 2); et

(iii) du revenu d’ernploi du

membre, sauf si ce

dernier participe à un

programme de

réadaptation approuvé

par l’Assureur auquel

cas la prestation

mensuelle sera réduite

conformément aux

dispositions de l’article

28; et

(iv) de la prestation de

revenu mensuelle totale

versée au membre en

vertu de la
Loi sur les

pensions
(y compris les

indemnités de personnes

à charge et les

versements rétroactifs

pour la période pendant

laquelle ces prestations

ont été financées en

vertu de la présente

section 2).

[Emphasis added]

Agreed Statement of Facts (8 September 2011) at p 41 (“SISIP

Policy 901102”, Part III(B), art 24) [SISIP Policy].

Page: 4

[5] The Class argues that their
Pension Act payments are non-indemnity disability benefits

intended to compensate CF members for impairments to their quality of life and limitations on their

activities of daily living. Because these payments are not a form of income replacement, they are

not caught by the benefit offset in Article 24(a)(iv) of the SISIP Policy which only permits the

deduction of “monthly income benefits”.

[6] The Defendant argues that the contracting parties, the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) and

Manulife Financial (Manulife), intended to offset these benefits and, in the context of the entire

scheme, that intention was manifest in the specialized language they used. According to the

Defendant, Article 24 of the SISIP Policy is simply an integration of benefits provision common to

many LTD insurance policies.

The SISIP Policy and the
Pension Act

[7] André Bouchard is the President of SISIP Financial Services. His affidavit provides helpful

historical background for the development of SISIP since its inception in 1969 and, for the most

part, that history is undisputed.

[8] SISIP was created because existing benefits programs accessible to CF members were

thought to be inadequate. SISIP was developed to provide “a group insurance plan that would

ensure that a disabled member or surviving depend[a]nts could maintain a reasonable standard of

living in the event of a disability or death”: Motion Record of the Defendant (Motion to Determine

Questions of Law) (28 October 2011) at p 28 (“Affidavit of André Bouchard” (28 October 2011) at

Page: 5

para 8) [Affidavit of André Bouchard]. The specific rationale for SISIP is contained in the

following passage from a briefing memorandum prepared for the CDS in June 1969:

2. Extensive study of the various forms of insurance coverage

provided by government indicated that more than fifty percent of

Canadian Forces personnel are inadequately protected by the Pension

Act and the Canadian Forces Superannuation Act, even though

entitlements under these acts are supplemented by benefits under

either the Canada or Quebec Pension Plans. One of the more

distressing aspects of this situation is that surviving widows and

children of personnel killed off duty or who suffer a non-service

disability during their first ten years of service, are left with little or,

in many instances, no income whatsoever with which to raise a

family or indeed to exist. Similarly, widows and children of

personnel with more than ten years service are required to accept an

overnight reduction in previous service income, ranging from 90% to

65% depending upon the length of service of the husband.

Obviously, some form of added protection is required to:

(a) provide an income to the widow and children of the

deceased or disabled serviceman who has insufficient

service to qualify for a service annuity;

(b) supplement the income from CFSA and Canada or

Quebec Pension Plans paid to the disabled

serviceman and the survivors of the deceased

serviceman to a level of approximately 60-80% of his

pay on death or disablement.

Affidavit of André Bouchard, Exhibit “A” at p 35 (“Brief for CDS

on the Servicemen’s Income Security Insurance Plan (SISIP)” (June

1969) at s 2).

[9] It is perhaps of some historical significance that the SISIP Policy, as initially proposed, was

seen as an income replacement supplement to the
Canadian Forces Superannuation Act, RSC 1985,

c C-17 [
CFSA], and the Canada and Quebec Pension Plans and separate from benefits payable

under the
Pension Act.

Page: 6

[10] SISIP was created under section 39 of the
National Defence Act, RSC 1985, c N-5, a

provision that authorizes the CDS to create programs for the benefit of CF members. Since its

inception, SISIP has been administered through a contract between the CDS and a private insurer

(now Manulife). Initial funding came entirely from voluntary premium payments from participating

members, but subsequent changes over the years have substantially reduced the percentage

contributions made by CF members. Since 2009, CF members pay 15% of the LTD premiums for

non-service-related disabilities and nothing for service-related disabilities. For regular members of

the CF who enlisted after April 1, 1982, participation in SISIP is mandatory and, since 1999,

participation by CF reserve members is also required.

[11] As initially conceived, the SISIP LTD benefit was reduced by amounts received by disabled

CF members under the
CFSA and the Canada and Quebec Pension Plans. Also, if a member

qualified for benefits under the
Pension Act on the basis of injury or death due to military service,

nothing was payable under the SISIP Policy.

[12] In 1971, CF members injured in “Special Duty Areas” were allowed to collect
Pension Act

benefits notwithstanding their continued service in the CF.

[13] In 1975, the basic SISIP LTD benefit was raised from 60% to 75% of a member’s income at

the time of release and monthly increments for dependant children were eliminated.

[14] In 1976, in recognition of the inadequacy of the monthly
Pension Act benefits, SISIP LTD

coverage was expanded to include service-related disabilities. It was at that point that the SISIP and

Page: 7

the
Pension Act schemes came together. According to Mr. Bouchard, it was also at that point that

benefits payable under the
Pension Act “were added to the list of applicable reductions” under the

SISIP Policy to prevent the “stacking” of payments from two federally-funded sources as well as for

reasons of “cost and equity”: Affidavit of André Bouchard at para 24.

[15] Mr. Bouchard’s affidavit provides the following additional rationale for the concern about

the “stacking” of benefits:

Discounting LTD benefits to take into account other sources of

income is a common feature of both public and private LTD

insurance plans, and is consistent with the objective of long term

disability insurance. Section 24(a)(iv) of Part III(B) of SISIP Policy

901102 (Exhibit “C”) is the provision that allows for the deduction of

other income from SISIP LTD benefits (“the set-off provision”).

[Emphasis added]

Affidavit of André Bouchard at para 19.

[16] In October 2000, the
Pension Act was amended to provide benefits to all members disabled

from military service injuries however occurring. Those disabled members who were able to

continue their military service were permitted to collect
Pension Act benefits in addition to their

salaries.

[17] In 2006, the
Canadian Forces Members and Veterans Re-establishment and Compensation

Act,
SC 2005, c 21 [New Veterans Charter], became law. It replaced the monthly Pension Act

benefits with a one-time lump sum award which is not deductible from the SISIP benefit. That

change was not made retroactive so as to apply to members of the Class.

Page: 8

[18] Mr. Bouchard characterizes the SISIP Policy as a contract between the CDS and Manulife

with benefits payable on a strictly contractual basis. He deposes that SISIP is an income

replacement scheme which guarantees a disabled CF member 75% of salary at the time of his or her

release. The SISIP benefits are not compensation for the gravity of one’s injuries or for the loss of

personal abilities. According to Mr. Bouchard, the
Pension Act offset in Article 24 is “required for

the proper functioning of a disability insurance scheme” and to prevent the theoretical potential for a

disabled member receiving “more funds in income replacement than he or she ever earned as an

employee”: Affidavit of André Bouchard at para 34. The SISIP Policy was not designed to bear the

entire burden of an income loss associated with a disability; instead, it shares that burden with other

programs such as the Canada Pension Plan, the
CFSA and the Pension Act. In short, Mr. Bouchard

apparently believes that the benefits payable under the
Pension Act are in the nature of income

replacements and are appropriately deducted from the SISIP benefits as a means of avoiding a

double-recovery for lost income.

[19] I accept Mr. Bouchard’s characterization of the SISIP as an income replacement scheme. In

fact, it appears to be classic indemnity insurance intended to replace a percentage of a CF member’s

lost income due to an inability to work.

[20] The
Pension Act provides pensions and other benefits to CF members except to the extent

that there is an entitlement to a lump sum award under the
New Veterans Charter. For members of

the Class, the
Pension Act applies and not the New Veterans Charter.

Page: 9

[21] Section 2 of the
Pension Act recognizes the Government of Canada’s (Canada) obligation to

compensate CF members who have been disabled or who have died in the service of Canadians.

This responsibility is met by giving a liberal construction to the language of the statute and by

giving the benefit of any doubt in the weighing of evidence to disabled veterans: see
Pension Act, s

5(3)(c). Section 3 of the
Pension Act defines disability as “the loss or lessening of the power to will

and to do any normal mental or physical act”.

[22] Section 35 of the
Pension Act provides that the amount of a disability pension shall be

determined in accordance with the assessment of the extent of the disability and is based on a set of

instructions and a table of disabilities made by the Minister of Veterans Affairs. Under section

35(4), a
Pension Act pension is not to be reduced because a disabled member “undertook work or

perfected themself in some form of industry” and, indeed, a
Pension Act disability benefit is payable

regardless of whether a disabled CF member continues in active service.

[23] The 2006 Table of Disabilities (Table) provides the following introduction:

The Table of Disabilities is the instrument used by Veterans Affairs

Canada to assess the degree of medical impairment caused by an

entitled disability. The Table of Disabilities has been revised using

the concept of medical impairment based on a per condition

methodology. The relative importance of that body part/body system

has been a consideration in the development of criteria to assess the

medical impairment resulting from the entitled disability. The

Disability Assessment will be established based on the medical

impairment rating, in conjunction with quality of life indicators

which assess the impact of the medical impairment on the

individual’s lifestyle.

Agreed Statement of Facts (8 September 2011) at p 321 (“Table of

Disabilities” (January 2006) at p 1, also available online:


d_total_2006.pdf >).

Page: 10

[24] According to the principles of assessment found in the Minister’s Table, the definition of

disability in the
Pension Act and the New Veterans Charter requires both medical (impairment) and

non-medical (quality of life) assessments. Medical impairment is made up of the physical loss or

alteration of any body part or system and the resulting functional loss. The quality of life

assessment examines a person’s ability to participate in activities of independent living, the ability

to take part in recreational and community activities and the ability to initiate and take part in

personal relationships. A major consideration in determining the quality of life effects is the degree

to which a disability has affected the usual or accustomed activities of the person being assessed.

[25] Although an assessment of the activities of independent living includes both domestic and

employment routines, the Minister’s Table makes it clear that one’s entitlement to a pension is not

dependent on a finding that a person cannot work.

[26] Once medical and quality of life ratings have been assessed, they are added to produce the

disability assessment from which the amount of the monthly
Pension Act benefit is derived. The

Table includes a disability scale measured in 20 increments from 5% to 100% disability. At each

increment, a basic pension benefit is indicated which is proportionate to the degree of disability

sustained.

[27] What is clear from the
Pension Act and the Minister’s Table is that the monthly benefit

payable to disabled members of the CF is not intended to be a form of income replacement. Instead,

it is designed to compensate for the loss of amenities of life and for the personal limitations and

Page: 11

sacrifices that arise from disabling injuries. This is not entirely lost on the Defendant. According to

a 2004 Reference Paper prepared by Veterans Affairs Canada, the purpose of
Pension Act disability

benefits is to “provide compensation for reductions in the quality, and sometimes the quantity, of

life experienced by the disabled” and not, as is commonly believed, to provide a form of income

replacement: Affidavit of Sergeant John G. Bartlett (22 September 2011), Exhibit “B” at p 8

(“Reference Paper: The Origins and Evolution of Veterans Benefits in Canada, 1914-2004” (March

2004) at p 5, also available online: ).

Issues

[28] Are the pension payments made pursuant to section 21 of the
Pension Act, “total monthly

income benefits” as that term is described in Article 24(a)(iv) of Part III(B) of SISIP Policy 901102?

[29] Are the pension payments made pursuant to section 21 of the
Pension Act, “monthly pay in

effect on the date of release from the Canadian Forces” as that term is described in Article 23(a) of

Part III(B) of SISIP Policy 901102?

Discussion

[30] To answer the questions posed on this motion, the Court is called to construe Article 24 of

the SISIP Policy and, in particular, to determine whether a disability pension payable under the

Pension Act
is included in the phrase “the total monthly income benefits payable to the member

under the Pension Act (including dependant benefits and retroactive payments covering the period

during which such benefits were prefunded . . .)”.

Page: 12

[31] Both parties agree that the principles of construction that apply to insurance contracts are

applicable: see Plaintiff’s Memorandum of Fact and Law: Motion to Determine Questions of Law

(22 September 2011) at para 128; Motion Record of the Defendant (Motion to Determine

Questions of Law) (28 October 2011) at p 6 (“Defendant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law” at para

16). The Defendant argues, however, that the members of the Class are not parties to the contract

and they must accept the interpretation of the SISIP Policy that the CDS and Manulife have

adopted. In effect, the Defendant submits that CF members are strangers to the contract who are

entitled to enforce the agreement but only on the terms that the CDS and Manulife accept, relying

on the authority of
Eli Lilly & Co v Novopharm Ltd, [1998] 2 SCR 129, [1998] SCJ no 59 (QL) [Eli

Lilly
], where the Court held at paragraph 53 that it was not open to a non-contracting party to rely

on the doctrine of
contra proferentem to undermine a contractual interpretation accepted by the

contracting parties. The Defendant also contends that the historical evolution of the SISIP Policy as

described by Mr. Bouchard confirms Canada’s intent to deduct the
Pension Act disability benefits

from SISIP LTD income.

[32] I do not accept that members of the Class are strangers to the SISIP Policy and legally

incapable of advancing their own interpretation of the contractual language.
Eli Lilly is

distinguishable. It involved a licensing agreement in which the non-contracting party had no

interest. By their very nature, policies of insurance are different; a beneficiary may be an insured

party to the policy but even a non-contracting beneficiary has a legal interest sufficient to have the

policy enforced and to argue for any interpretation that would be open to either of the contracting

parties. The fact that the SISIP Policy is a group policy and that the CDS and Manulife are named

parties does not support an argument that the covered CF members are not entitled to rely upon any

Page: 13

of the interpretive rules that apply to insurance contracts generally: see
Co-operators Life Insurance

Co v Gibbens
, 2009 SCC 59 at para 28, [2009] 3 SCR 605; Ryan v Sun Life Assurance Co of

Canada
, 2005 NSCA 12 at para 26, 230 NSR (2d) 132 [Ryan v Sun Life]; St-Laurent v Sun Life

Assurance Co of Canada
(1989), 101 NBR (2d) 354, [1989] NBJ no 535 (QL) (CA); Hoult Estate

v First Canadian Insurance Corp
, [1995] ILR 1-3125 at paras 17-18, 1994 CarswellBC 841 (WL

Can) (SC);
Milner v Manufacturer’s Life Insurance Co, 2006 BCSC 1571 at para 16, [2006] BCJ no

2787 (QL) [
Milner v Manufacturer’s Life]; Canada Life Assurance Co v Donohue (1999), 46 OR

(3d) 82 at para 15, [1999] OJ no 3549 (QL) (Sup Ct J) [
Canada Life v Donohue].

[33] Indeed, in the context of the extant contractual relationship between the CDS and Manulife

where the entire risk is underwritten by the CDS and managed by Manulife, the
de facto insurer is

the CDS and the
de facto insureds are CF members. This is consistent with the history of the SISIP

Policy which was drafted by the CDS and imposed by the CDS on CF members. CF members have

always paid or contributed to the cost of the program and the SISIP Policy expressly recognizes

their status as insureds: see for example SISIP Policy, Part I, art 27; SISIP Policy, Part III(A), arts

52-53. In particular, Article 52 describes how “an eligible member becomes insured” under the

LTD plan. This express recognition of CF members as insureds under the SISIP Policy and their

premium contributions are inconsistent with the Defendant’s argument that the only insured party is

the CDS. In this context, it is the insured CF members and Canada, through the CDS, that have

competing interests. Manulife is, in effect, a largely, if not entirely, disinterested third party that

would have no apparent interest in contesting the views of its commercial partner on whose behalf it

administers the plan.

Page: 14

[34] The Defendant’s argument that the interpretation of Article 24 may be aided by the

contractual history and Treasury Board motives outlined by Mr. Bouchard is similarly misguided. It

may well have been the CDS’s intention to set off the
Pension Act disability benefit from the SISIP

LTD benefit. But the SISIP Policy is not a statutory instrument to be interpreted by means of a

search for a Parliamentary intent. In interpreting a contract of insurance, the search is not for the

subjective intent of either contracting party but, rather, for the common intent of both parties which,

hopefully, can be found in the language they have employed and from the overall context in which

that language is to be applied. This point was well expressed by Justice Thomas Cromwell in
Ryan

v Sun Life
, above, at paragraph 24:

24 I mention this because the parties and the Chambers judge

referred to evidence concerning the exchange of drafts and

correspondence between the parties relating to this new subrogation

clause. While there can be little doubt from a review of this material

that the insurer's objective in advancing the language which was

subsequently adopted was to give it the right to share in all types of

damages, the issue is not what the insurer intended. Rather, as

Iacobucci, J. emphasized in Eli Lilly, the question is what was the

contractual intent of the parties. This is to be determined from the

words they used in light of the surrounding circumstances. Evidence

of the subjective intent of one of the parties has no independent place

in this endeavour; it is unnecessary to consider any extrinsic evidence

at all when the document is clear and unambiguous: Eli Lilly at

paras. 54-55.

[35] In
Milner v Manufacturer’s Life, above, the Court similarly inferred what the insurer was

attempting to accomplish in the drafting of a collateral source integration provision but rejected the

insurer’s interpretation because of a lack of clarity in the policy language. In short, what the drafter

of a policy may have had in mind is not the issue. The question is what the language employed

would objectively mean to the parties.

Page: 15

[36] Accordingly, the Defendant’s reliance on the 1976 SISIP Policy amendment is

misconceived: see above at para 14. Although Mr. Bouchard deposes that this change was made in

recognition of an overlap that arose when the SISIP Policy coverage was extended to serviceattributable

injuries, the issue for determination is whether the CDS chose adequate language to

achieve that result. After all, CF members were not privy to the CDS’s rationale for changes to the

SISIP Policy nor were they consulted.

[37] As a general rule, parol evidence is not admissible to establish the subjective intent of one

party to an insurance contract. The only basis for introducing parol evidence is to show an

underwriting purpose for a disputed term. This point was made in
Abdulrahim v Manufacturers

Life Insurance Co
(2003), 65 OR (3d) 543, [2003] OJ no 2592 (QL) (Sup Ct J):

67 Parol evidence relating to the surrounding circumstances of a

contract may be admissible in certain cases (for example, to explain

commercial purpose). Evidence as to subjective contractual intention,

however, including draft letters or other expressions of intention

made in the course of negotiations (Indian Molybdenum, supra at

503) and intentions in drafting or implementing an agreement (Eli

Lilly, supra at para. 59) is inadmissible. In Transcanada Pipelines,

Lane J. wrote at para. 12:

Direct evidence from a party as to his intention in the

use of particular language is not an admissible part of

the context. This is particularly so where, as here, the

party did not communicate the relevant intention at

the time to the opposite party.

68 Manulife has had complete control over the wording of this

contract, and it could have used more specific wording in

constructing the exclusion clause if it wished to limit the benefits

payable to the insured in these circumstances. The interpretive

principles articulated by the Supreme Court relating to insurance

contracts apply. In this regard, in Eli Lilly, supra, Iacobucci J. only

delved into the question of whether a party could call extrinsic

evidence in after specifically noting (at para. 53) that contra

proferentum and other interpretive principles did not apply, because

Page: 16

the claim was being brought by a third party. In the case before me,

these principles apply and compel me to find in favour of the

plaintiff.

[Emphasis added]

[38] I accept that Mr. Bouchard’s affidavit touches on an underwriting concern about the

avoidance of stacking income benefits. While this is admissible evidence, it is based on a

mischaracterization of the nature of the benefits payable to disabled CF members under the
Pension

Act
. They are not an indemnity for lost income. Rather, they represent compensation for

impairments to the activities in daily living including loss of function and for reductions in the

quality of life. In the result, Mr. Bouchard’s principal underwriting justification for deducting

Pension Act
benefits from a member’s SISIP LTD income (ie. to avoid an excess recovery of lost

income) is untenable. There is nothing untoward or objectionable about a disabled CF member

receiving a
Pension Act disability award in addition to an LTD benefit to compensate for lost

income. It is also not accurate for Mr. Bouchard to say that the Defendant’s offset of benefits under

Article 24(a)(iv) of the SISIP Policy represents a typical approach to the integration of benefits

under an LTD policy. The common law does not permit an LTD insurer to subrogate against an

insured’s non-indemnity entitlements and LTD insurers generally respect that distinction in their

policies: see
Gibson v Sun Life Assurance Co of Canada (1984), 45 OR (2d) 326, 6 DLR (4th) 746

(H Ct J);
Maritime Life Assurance Co v Mullenix (1986), 76 NSR (2d) 118, [1986] NSJ no 479

(QL) (SC (TD)). Where an insurer attempts to achieve a windfall by pursuing the recovery of

something different in kind from what they have paid to the insured, they are frequently

unsuccessful: see
Bannon v McNeely (1998), 38 OR (3d) 659 at paras 49-50, 159 DLR (4th) 223

(CA).

Page: 17

[39] I also do not recognize saving money as a legitimate underwriting concern. It is always in

the interest of the underwriter to save money in responding to claims and that advantage is

primarily, if not completely, obtained at the expense of the insured. Such an argument cannot be

used to assist an insurer or to interpret disputed policy language.

[40] Having determined that the Class is not contractually disadvantaged in the manner

suggested by the Defendant, it is important to recognize the principles that apply to the

interpretation of insurance contracts and, in particular, contracts of adhesion.

[41] In
Jesuit Fathers of Upper Canada v Guardian Insurance Co of Canada, 2006 SCC 21,

[2006] 1 SCR 744, the Supreme Court of Canada discussed the special interpretive rules that apply

to insurance contracts. In doing so, the Court was cognizant of the unequal bargaining power that

exists when the insurance agreement is formed. The following passages from the decision are

instructive:

27 Insurance policies form a special category of contracts. As

with all contracts, the terms of the policy must be examined, in light

of the surrounding circumstances, in order to determine the intent of

the parties and the scope of their understanding. Nevertheless,

through its long history, insurance law has given rise to a number of

principles specific to the interpretation of insurance policies. These

principles were recently reviewed by this Court in
Non-Marine

Underwriters, Lloyd’s of London v. Scalera
, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 551,

2000 SCC 24. They apply only where there is an ambiguity in the

terms of the policy.

28 First, the courts should be aware of the unequal bargaining

power at work in the negotiation of an insurance contract and

interpret it accordingly. This is done in two ways: (1) through the

application of the
contra proferentem rule; (2) through the broad

interpretation of coverage provisions and the narrow interpretation of

Page: 18

exclusions. These rules require that ambiguities be construed against

the drafter. . . .

29 Second, the courts should try to give effect to the reasonable

expectations of the parties, without reading in windfalls in favour of

any of them. In essence, “the courts should be loath to support a

construction which would either enable the insurer to pocket the

premium without risk or the insured to achieve a recovery which

could neither be sensibly sought nor anticipated at the time of the

contract” (
Consolidated-Bathurst Export Ltd. v. Mutual Boiler and

Machinery Insurance Co.
, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 888, pp. 901-902; Non-

Marine Underwriters
, at para.71).

30 Finally, the context of the particular risk must also be taken

into account. . . .

[42] The idea that the Court should look for meaning on the basis of the reasonable expectations

of the parties is not new. It goes back at least as far as the decision in
Consolidated Bathurst Export

Ltd v Mutual Boiler and Machinery Insurance Co,
[1980] 1 SCR 888, [1979] SCJ no 133 (QL),

where Justice Willard Estey held that literal meaning should give way to an interpretation that

promotes a fair and sensible commercial result. A construction that enables either of the parties to

achieve an unintended windfall at the expense of the other is usually to be avoided. It seems to me

that this is another way of saying that context takes precedence over strict literalism in the

interpretation of contracts of insurance. In the face of an ambiguity, however, the doctrine of
contra

proferentem
applies and the reasonable expectation of the insured is always favoured.

[43] It is, therefore, left to the Court to determine what was intended by the phrase “the total

monthly income benefits payable to the member under the Pension Act (including dependant

benefits and retroactive payments . . .)”. The task is not to interpret any particular word or phrase in

isolation but, rather, in the context of the complete agreement and the surrounding circumstances.

Page: 19

The search for meaning is performed by looking objectively for a common intention and one that

achieves a fair and sensible commercial outcome for the parties.

The Plaintiff’s Argument

[44] The Plaintiff’s principal argument for challenging the legality of the Defendant’s offset of

the
Pension Act benefit from the monthly SISIP benefit is that the former is not a “monthly income

benefit” as that phrase is used in Article 24(a)(iv) of the SISIP Policy. According to the Plaintiff,

the word “income” has interpretive significance as a qualifier to the words that precede and follow

it. “Income” signifies an intent to deduct only monthly
Pension Act benefits that can be

characterized as indemnities for lost income. That interpretation gives meaning to the word that is

consistent with its normal grammatical use and conforms with the income replacement character of

the SISIP benefit and the three other offsets described in Article 24. It also conforms to the

common law approach which denies rights of offset or subrogation to an LTD insurer with respect

to an insured’s non-indemnity entitlements.

[45] According to the Plaintiff, if the parties intended to deduct the monthly
Pension Act

disability benefit from the SISIP LTD benefit, there would be no need to use the word “income” at

all. It would have been sufficient to say “the total monthly benefits payable to the member under

the Pension Act”. This approach is employed in Article 64 of the SISIP Policy where the monthly

dismemberment benefit is “reduced by any monthly benefits payable pursuant to . . . [t]he Pension

Act . . .”: see SISIP Policy, Part III(A), art 64 [emphasis added]. The Plaintiff contends that the

addition of the qualifying term “income” in Article 24(a)(iv) indicates a different intent.

Page: 20

[46] In short, the Plaintiff says that the monthly
Pension Act disability benefit that the Defendant

has deducted from his SISIP LTD benefit and from other members of the Class is not payable with

respect to lost income and, therefore, does not qualify as an offset under Article 24(a)(iv).

[47] The Plaintiff invokes the authority of
Stitzinger v Imperial Life Assurance Co of Canada

(1998), 39 OR (3d) 566, 60 OTC 161 (Ct J (Gen Div)), which considered an LTD benefit

integration provision providing for the offset of “total monthly income from all sources”. The

insured recovered damages in an action against a tortfeasor, including damages for lost earning

capacity, that were payable periodically from an annuity. The insurer sought to deduct the annuity

benefits from its LTD obligation. In holding against the insurer, the Court characterized the award

of damages as compensation for the loss of personal ability and not a form of income replacement.

The fact that the damages were payable periodically did “not change their legal character” and the

payments were “not income within the meaning and intention” of the policy. The Court went on to

note that, at common law, the insurer’s right to subrogate against its insured’s collateral recoveries

only arose once the insured’s losses had been fully satisfied and not before. According to the

Plaintiff, this principle is violated by the SISIP offset because a disabled CF member is left

substantially under-compensated upon release. To the same effect is the decision in
Elliott and

Attorney-General of Ontario
, [1973] 2 OR 534 at para 6, [1973] OJ no 1934 (QL) (CA), where the

Court held that compensation for pain and suffering did “not bear the character of income as that

word is ordinarily understood”: see also
Doucet v New Brunswick, 2004 NBQB 398, 283 NBR (2d)

51.

Page: 21

The Defendant’s Argument

[48] The Defendant argues that Article 24 of the SISIP Policy must have been inserted for some

underwriting purpose and that, as it is written, it can only refer to one thing – the deduction of the

Pension Act
disability benefits, including dependent benefits, from the SISIP LTD payment.

According to the Defendant, there are no other extant benefits available to CF members or their

dependents under the
Pension Act that could be deducted.

[49] The Defendant also contends that the word “income” has a broader meaning than the one

the Plaintiff advances. It refers to the expansive definition of “income” in the
Income Tax Act, RSC

1985, c 1 (5th Supp), and in matrimonial cases concerned with spousal and child support. These

examples suggest that the word can include money coming from a diversity of sources including

disability pension benefits. The same point is made concerning the word “revenu” as it is used in

the French text of Article 24 of the SISIP Policy.

[50] The Defendant also relies on the phrase “monthly income benefit” in Articles 23 and 24 in

connection with the SISIP benefit and the offsets for superannuation, Canada and Quebec Pension

Plans and other employment income. According to this view, Article 24(a)(iv) represents a

consistent use of the word “income” in connection with the SISIP benefit and all of the applicable

deductions. A similar point is made about the
Pension Act which prohibits the assignment or

commutation of an award except to the extent of a holdback from a retroactive award to reimburse a

provincial welfare authority. This is said to be a recognition of the integration of
Pension Act

awards with provincial welfare schemes. The Defendant argues that the same is true of the

Page: 22

Departmental offsets that are recognized under section 32(2) of the
Pension Act and intended to

prevent the stacking of federal benefits.

[51] The Defendant further relies on an agreement signed by the Plaintiff and other members of

the Class as a condition of receiving SISIP benefits (the reimbursement agreement). Under that

agreement, a disabled plan member agrees to reimburse the insurer for amounts recovered from

third-party sources “including the Canada Pension Plan, Quebec Pension Plan, Canadian Forces

Superannuation Act, Government Employer Compensation Act (GECA), Worker’s Compensation

Act, Automobile Insurance and the Pension Act”: Affidavit of André Bouchard, Exhibit “D” at

p 40. The Defendant says that this agreement confirms the intent under the SISIP Policy to deduct

Pension Act
disability benefits from LTD income.

Discussion of Issue No. 1: Are the Pension Payments Made Pursuant to Section 21 of the

Pension Act, “total monthly income benefits” as That Term is Described in Article 24(a)(iv)

of Part III(B) of SISIP Policy 901102?

[52] The Defendant contends that Article 24(a)(iv) must include
Pension Act disability benefits

because there is no other extant benefit that would be caught by the provision. The Plaintiff answers

that insurance policies frequently contain generic exclusions or coverage limitations that have no

application to a particular insured or to a particular claim. The Plaintiff adds that the
Pension Act

could be amended at any time to create an income replacement benefit that would be deductible

from the SISIP LTD benefit and thereby give some practical effect to Article 24(a)(iv).

[53] What happened, of course, is that the Defendant did amend the
Pension Act to replace the

monthly
Pension Act disability benefit with a one-time lump-sum award that is not now deductible

Page: 23

from the SISIP LTD income stream. This amendment renders Article 24(a)(iv) of the SISIP Policy

meaningless for future claims so that its only arguable remaining significance is with respect to

claims which predate the
Pension Act amendment. It seems to me that this legislative history adds

some strength to the Plaintiff’s argument that there is nothing inherently problematic about a

contractual provision that limits coverage that has no immediate significance or practical effect.

This is, after all, not a statutory provision where the presumption against tautology might apply. For

a contract of insurance – and particularly group insurance – one could well expect to find limiting

provisions or exclusions that have no present application to a particular claim or claims.

[54] The Defendant’s remaining arguments are not compelling. The fact that the
Income Tax Act

and spousal and child support guidelines incorporate expansive definitions of income is hardly

surprising given the different purposes they serve. The authorities cited by the Plaintiff are stronger

comparators because they are concerned with principles of compensation for injury and related

claims for offset (or subrogation) of collateral source recoveries. Furthermore, it was open to the

CDS to include an expansive definition of “income” in the SISIP Policy but he elected not to do so.

The fact that the French word “revenu” is sometimes used to include pension income is similarly

not surprising inasmuch as many pensions are forms of income replacement or substitution. The

question remains as to whether the word “revenu” includes a disability benefit that bears no

relationship to an income loss. I can identify nothing in the French text of Article 24 that assists the

Defendant on this issue.

[55] The Defendant’s argument that the
Pension Act describes a disability pension as a “benefit”

also fails to answer the interpretive issue arising from Article 24. The essential problem remains

Page: 24

that the
Pension Act does not describe a disability pension as an “income benefit” and clearly it is

not.

[56] The fact that Articles 23 and 24 respectively describe the SISIP benefit and the offsets for

superannuation, Canada and Quebec Pension Plan benefits and employment income as “monthly

income benefits” does not assist the Defendant either because the SISIP benefits and all of the other

offsets identified in Article 24 are forms of income replacement or income substitution that fit

comfortably within the term “monthly income benefits”. This distinction does not detract from the

Plaintiff’s interpretation but actually supports it.

[57] The Defendant’s argument that sections 30 and 32 of the
Pension Act confirm an intent to

integrate disability pensions with the SISIP LTD benefits fails for much the same reason. The fact

that the
Pension Act recognizes and limits certain benefit overlaps does not mean that Article 24 of

the SISIP Policy accomplishes the same result. There is no question that the CDS is fully capable of

creating a lawful offset of benefits by statute or by contract notwithstanding the harshness of the

result. But when he does so by contract, clear language must be used to express that intent.

[58] The Defendant also invokes the reimbursement agreement signed by Class members which

states that CF members’ LTD benefits will be set off by other sources of income including
Pension

Act
benefits. However, I give this document no weight as a guide to interpreting Article 24 of the

SISIP Policy. It is an after-the-fact document that does not alter the SISIP Policy and, according to

Mr. Bouchard’s affidavit at paragraph 40, CF members are required to sign it as a condition of

receiving benefits. I would add that this agreement purports to include sources of income that are

Page: 25

nowhere referenced in the SISIP Policy (ie. Workers Compensation, automobile insurance) as

appropriate offsets and, therefore, appears to include recoveries that cannot be contractually justified

under the SISIP Policy. If anything, this document reflects a profound misunderstanding by the

Defendant about what is contractually appropriate to demand from an insured in terms of third-party

benefit offsets or recoveries.

[59] I have no doubt that the CDS could have drafted a provision that clearly authorized the

deduction of a CF member’s
Pension Act pension benefit from the SISIP LTD benefit. There is,

after all, no limit on what the parties to a contract may stipulate. However, the CDS drafted

Article 24 of the SISIP Policy by incorporating the limiting term “income” with respect to the offset

of
Pension Act benefits. The CDS did not include that limiting term in a number of other offset

provisions in the SISIP Policy or in the
War Veterans Allowance Act, RSC 1985, c W-3. And more

recently, a reduction to the earnings loss benefits payable under the
Canadian Forces Members and

Veterans Re-establishment and Compensation Regulations
, SOR/2006-50, was claimed for

“disability pension benefits payable under the
Pension Act”: see s 22(a). This provision very clearly

captures the
Pension Act disability benefit and the different approach in Article 24 indicates a

different intent.

[60] It seems to me that the term “income” cannot be ignored. The word is entirely unnecessary

if the intention was to provide for the deduction of
Pension Act disability benefits. In common

parlance, an “income benefit” is not a benefit in the nature of a
Pension Act disability award and, at

common law, the distinction is rigorously enforced by preventing an insurer from limiting its

liability in the way that the CDS has done against members of the Class. In fact, the common law

Page: 26

rationale behind the insurer’s right to subrogate against the insured’s collateral recoveries is to

prevent double recovery. The right to subrogate is not recognized where the effect is to leave the

insured under-compensated. This point is expressed by the Ontario Court of Appeal in the

following passage from
Bannon v McNeely, above, at paras 48-49:

48 In Jang, supra, Lambert J.A. for the British Columbia Court of

Appeal, concluded that:

The theory underlying s. 24 of the Insurance (Motor Vehicle) Act

is that there should not be double compensation for the same loss.

But that does not mean that all of the benefits paid under Pt. 7 must

be deducted one way or another from some item of damages, or from

the total award of damages.
It is only where the benefit corresponds

with the particular heading of claim for damages that the benefit is to

be deducted, and then only from the award for that particular head

of damages.
The requirement that the benefit match the claim is

implicit in the legislative scheme as it was described in Baart v.

Kumar, supra, and is explicit in s. 24(2), which matches "a claim for

damages" with "benefits respecting the claim." I do not think that the

claim there referred to is the whole claim; rather, it is a claim to a

particular heading of loss matched by a particular heading of

benefits. There was no match in this case between the benefits paid

to Mrs. Jang for homemaker disability and the claim made by Mrs.

Jang for general damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenities of

life. [Emphasis added]

49 Notwithstanding the far-reaching proposition I have quoted

from O'Donnell and most of the trial level decisions referred to

above, my opinion with respect to the deductibility of no-fault

benefits is more in accord with the approach taken by the British

Columbia Court of Appeal in Jang, supra. I believe that, where

possible, any no-fault benefit deducted from a tort award under s.

267(1)(a) must be deducted from a head of damage or type of loss

akin to that for which the no-fault benefits were intended to

compensate. In other words, and employing the comparison of

Morden J. in Cox, supra, if at all possible, apples should be deducted

from apples, and oranges from oranges. It follows further from this

conclusion that if the no-fault deduction exceeds the amount awarded

under the specific head of damages to which the no-fault benefits can

be attributed, then there cannot be resort to another portion of the tort

judgment for the balance. The particular plaintiff must account for

no-fault benefits to which he or she is entitled, but where as in the

case on appeal, the plaintiffs' case consisted of evidence directed

Page: 27

towards a tort judgment for a net award, the no-fault benefits have

been accounted for under appropriate damage headings.

[Emphasis added]

[61] The Defendant’s interpretation of Article 24(a)(iv) of the SISIP Policy is inconsistent with

the above approach and results in the substantial under-compensation of disabled CF members

following their release. The Defendant’s interpretation of Article 24(a)(iv) also creates particular

hardship for those who are the most in need of their
Pension Act benefits because of disabling

injuries.

[62] Viewed contextually and with the reasonable expectations of the parties in mind, what was

the common intent behind the use of the word “income” to qualify the word “benefit”? Would

anyone examining the SISIP Policy reasonably expect that a
Pension Act disability benefit that

bears no relationship to lost future income would, in the event of a disabling injury, be deducted

from a CF member’s SISIP income replacement benefit? Of perhaps greater significance is whether

a CF member who suffers a catastrophic combat injury at a level approaching 100% disability

would expect to effectively receive nothing more than 75% of his CF income and to be treated the

same as a CF member with a disability of lesser functional significance arising outside of his

military service.

[63] It seems to me that to ask these questions is to answer them. Giving effect to the SISIP

offset of
Pension Act disability benefits wholly deprives disabled veterans of an important financial

award intended to compensate for disabling injuries suffered in the service of Canadians. The SISIP

offset effectively defeats the Parliamentary intent that is inherent in the
Pension Act which is to

Page: 28

provide modest financial solace to disabled CF members for their non-financial losses. The

approach adopted by the Defendant does not lead to a fair or sensible commercial result and defeats

the reasonable expectation of CF members. CF members looking at the SISIP Policy and, in

particular Article 24, would expect that they were obtaining a meaningful and not illusory LTD

benefit payable over and above their
Pension Act disability entitlement for the loss of personal

amenities. This view is enhanced by the fact that disabled CF members who continue with their

active service are entitled to be paid and to keep their
Pension Act disability benefits and by the fact

that they lose their right of action against the Crown to pursue claims to damages (including income

losses) if a
Pension Act benefit is payable: see Crown Liability and Proceedings Act, RSC 1985, c

C-50, s 9. The practical consequence of the claimed offset is to substantially reduce or to extinguish

the LTD coverage promised to members of the Class by the SISIP Policy with particularly harsh

effect on the most seriously disabled CF members who have been released from active service.

That is an outcome that could not reasonably have been intended and I reject it unreservedly.

[64] Even if I am wrong in the interpretation I have placed on Article 24(a)(iv), the issue must be

resolved against the Defendant on the basis of the principle of
contra proferentem. Where a policy

of insurance contains exceptions and limitations to coverage, it is incumbent on the drafter to use

language that clearly expresses the extent and scope of those limiting provisions: see
Indemnity

Insurance Co of North America v Excel Cleaning Service
, [1954] SCR 169 at para 35, 1954

CarswellOnt 132 (WL Can). Here, the offset Canada has applied represents a substantial limitation

to a CF member’s LTD coverage: a limitation that effectively deprives the most seriously disabled

CF members from recovering much, if anything, for their income losses. Because the CDS did not

make it “perfectly clear” that he could deduct a member’s
Pension Act disability pension from the

Page: 29

SISIP LTD benefit, any ambiguity stands to be resolved in favour of the Plaintiff and the other

members of the Class: see
Canada Life v Donohue, above, at para 14.

[65] Having determined that the Defendant’s offset of
Pension Act disability benefits from LTD

income payable under the SISIP Policy is not contractually justified, it is unnecessary to consider

the second issue raised by the parties. A further case-management meeting with counsel will be

convened to discuss the implications of this decision for the continuation of the proceeding.

Page: 30

ORDER

THIS COURT ORDERS that
the Defendant’s offset of Pension Act disability benefits

from the SISIP LTD income payable to the Plaintiff and to the other members of the Class is in

breach of Article 24(a)(iv) of the SISIP policy.

"R.L. Barnes"

Judge

FEDERAL COURT

SOLICITORS OF RECORD

DOCKET:
T-463-07

STYLE OF CAUSE:
MANUGE v HMTQ

PLACE OF HEARING:
Halifax, NS

DATE OF HEARING:
November 16 and 17, 2011

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT:
BARNES J.

DATED:
May 1, 2012

APPEARANCES:

Ward Branch

Daniel Wallace

FOR THE PLAINTIFF

James Gunvaldsen-Klaassen

Lori Rasmussen

FOR THE DEFENDANT

SOLICITORS OF RECORD:

McInnes Cooper

Halifax, NS

and

Branch MacMaster

Vancouver, BC

FOR THE PLAINTIFF

Myles J. Kirvan

Deputy Attorney General of Canada

Halifax, NS

FOR THE DEFENDANT

Monday, April 30, 2012

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Docket: E113741

Citation:
J.C.M. v. A.N.A.,
2012 BCSC 584
Date: 20120423
Docket: E113741
Registry: Vancouver
Between:
J.C.M.
Claimant
And
A.N.A.
Respondent
Before: The Honourable Madam Justice Russell
Corrected Judgment: The first page of the judgment was corrected on April 25, 2012 where the spelling of the name of first counsel for the claimant was corrected and a second counsel for the claimant was added
Reasons for Judgment
Counsel for Claimant:
Lawrence A. Kahn, Q.C.
Isabel Stramwasser
Counsel for Respondent:
Georgialee Lang
Place and Date of Hearing:
Vancouver, B.C.
April 2, 2012
Place and Date of Judgment:
Vancouver, B.C.
April 23, 2012

[1] This is a summary trial application under Rule 11-3 of the Supreme Court Family Rules by the claimant. The claimant seeks an order declaring 13 sperm straws stored at Genesis Fertility Clinic to be her sole property. The respondent opposes the application, requesting the sperm straws be destroyed by order of this court.
Background and Context
[2] The parties agree on the facts. They are as follows.
[3] In October 1998, J.C.M. and A.N.A. began a spousal relationship. During the course of that relationship, they each gave birth to one child using therapeutic insemination with sperm provided from a single sperm donor. A.N.A. gave birth to their first child in 2000 and J.C.M. gave birth to their second child in 2002.
[4] The couple separated in 2006. They entered into a separation agreement in 2007.
[5] The agreement provided for custody and support. The first child resides primarily with A.N.A., but visits J.C.M. on Mondays and Saturdays. The second child resides primarily with J.C.M., but visits A.N.A. on Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. J.C.M. pays A.N.A. child support for both children.
[6] The agreement also divided all joint property of the relationship. The 13 sperm straws remaining from the sperm donor were inadvertently not divided under the agreement.
[7] The sperm straws are stored at Genesis Fertility Centre in Vancouver. According to a registered nurse working at the centre, one of the purposes of Genesis is to “facilitate donor insemination with gametes from anonymous donors.”
[8] Evidence on the science and biology involved in therapeutic insemination was not provided to me for the purpose of this summary trial. I understand a sperm straw to be a vial that the sperm donation is placed in to be properly stored for future use, such as assisted insemination, as was the case here. At the risk of oversimplifying the biology involved, it is also my understanding that “gametes” describe either a male’s sperm or a female’s ovum. I will use gametes interchangeably with sperm for the purpose of this decision, unless indicated otherwise.
[9] The parties purchased the donor sperm from a sperm bank in the United States, known as Xytex, in 1999. They paid approximately $250 per sperm straw.
[10] At the time the parties chose their donor, Genesis advised them that this donor had “retired from the program.” As a result, only the sperm remaining with Xytex was available. The donor would not be available for further donation.
[11] J.C.M. met T.L. in 2009. They began a spousal relationship in 2010. T.L. wishes to have a child with J.C.M. using the remaining sperm straws so that their child will be biologically related to the children of her relationship with A.N.A.
[12] J.C.M. emailed A.N.A in September 2011 and advised of her wish for T.L. to have a child using the sperm straws. She offered to purchase what she determined to be A.N.A.’s half interest in the sperm straws (6 ½ straws) for $250 per straw. A.N.A. responded that after careful consideration she would prefer the sperm straws be destroyed. She requested that the parties meet in person to further discuss their “thoughts/feelings” on the issue. Whether that discussion took place is unclear.
[13] Counsel for J.C.M. sent a letter to A.N.A. in October 2011 asking her to reconsider her position that the sperm straws be destroyed.
[14] In the fall of 2011, J.C.M. researched the sperm donor database and found another family who had used the same sperm donor. She contacted the woman who was listed on the database as having given birth to children from that donor. She was advised that the woman did not have any “extra” sperm straws available.
[15] In November 2011, J.C.M. contacted Xytex and learned that the donor of the sperm straws was no longer on file. She also learned Xytex had no contact information for the donor. She was advised it would be expensive to pay for an attempt to find the sperm donor.
[16] Also in November 2011, J.C.M. confirmed with Genesis that the parties did not have a contract with either Genesis or Xytex that defined their rights to the sperm straws.
[17] After receiving A.N.A.’s refusal to consent to the release of the sperm straws, and with no other way of obtaining sperm from the same donor, J.C.M. filed this application.
Issues
[18] The issues are as follows:
1. Are the sperm straws property?
2. Is it relevant for the court to consider the best interests of the existing children and any future donor offspring when deciding whether the claimant should be awarded the sperm straws?
3. Is insemination from an anonymous sperm donor proscribed in British Columbia?
4. If the answer to 1 is yes, how should the sperm straws be divided between the claimant and the respondent?
Issue 1: Are the sperm straws property?
[19] The claimant argues that on the facts of this case, the sperm straws should be treated as property. She says that based on case law from the United States and the United Kingdom, as well as one case from Canada, if awarding the gametes to one party does not create a parental obligation on another party who does not wish to procreate, there is “no logical reason to treat the gametes as other than property.”
[20] The claimant cites first the Canadian case of C.C. v. A.W., 2005 ABQB 290. This case involved, mainly, a child access dispute between the parties. The children, twins, were born to C.C. through a donation of sperm from A.W. However, the parties were also arguing over the four embryos that remained from the in vitro fertilization. A.W. refused to consent to the embryos’ release given the difficulty he had faced from C.C. over access to the twins. He was concerned she would use them to have another child.
[21] The court found that the embryos were C.C.’s property, stating at paras. 20-21:
[20] When Mr. A.W. provided his sperm to assist in the conception of children, he did so as a friend of Ms. C.C.'s. He was not her spouse. They were not in a relationship of interdependence of some permanence. Their intimate relationship was over. He extended a courtesy to a friend by giving her a gift of his sperm. He knew what it would be used for. He anticipated that she would use it in order to conceive a child. Initial efforts in this endeavour were not successful. Success was not achieved by Ms. C.C. until more than three years after the gift was provided.
[21] The gift was an unqualified gift given in order to conceive children. Mr. A.W. fully knew that Ms. C.C. could use the fertilized embryos when and as she chose. That was implicit in his gift to her. The remaining fertilized embryos remain her property. They are chattels that can be used as she sees fit. Mr. A.W. is not in a position to control or direct their use in any fashion. They shall be returned to Ms. C.C.. Conversely, as they are not Mr. A.W.'s property and he has no legal interest in them, he is not responsible for paying for their storage. That responsibility lies with Ms. C.C. who owns the embryos.
[Emphasis added.]
[22] The claimant also relies on the U.K .case of Jonathan Yearworth & Ors v. North Bristol NHS Trust, [2009] EWCA Civ 37. This case involved six men who had provided semen samples before undergoing chemotherapy for cancer. They had been advised by medical professionals that the chemotherapy might make them infertile. The semen samples were intended to assist the men in biologically fathering children in the future should they need it. The samples were frozen and stored in a lab at the Southmead Hospital, for which the defendant Trust was responsible.
[23] In June of 2003, the liquid nitrogen in the tanks used to freeze the samples fell below the required amount needed to keep the samples frozen. The samples thawed and the sperm perished. The six men brought an action in negligence for damage to property against the Trust claiming mental distress and psychiatric injury.
[24] The court reviewed the history of common law’s refusal to “recognize a substance generated by the body as capable of being owned”: at para. 29. The origins of this were outlined at para. 30:
30. "Dominus membrorum suorum nemo videtur" (no one is to be regarded as the owner of his own limbs): Ulpian, Edict, D9 2 13 pr. The common law has always adopted the same principle: a living human body is incapable of being owned. An allied principle is that a person does not even "possess" his body or any part of it: R v. Bentham [2005] UKHL 18, [2005] 1 WLR 1057. Notwithstanding these principles, the law compensates by making an elaborate series of rules for the protection of the body and bodily autonomy: see, eg, Airedale NHS Trust v Bland [1993] AC 789. One consequence of the principles, albeit not recognised until the nineteenth century, is that, if our bodies cannot be our own property, it follows that they cannot be the property of other persons; and that therefore we cannot sell ourselves, or be sold, to others. Another consequence is that, if we do not own our bodies, we have no right to destroy them, i.e. to commit suicide; in this respect it was necessary for Parliament, by s.1 of the Suicide Act 1961, to legislate the necessary reform to the criminal law.
[25] This principle was not only applied to living human bodies. The court discussed the case law surrounding ownership of corpses which was also specifically forbidden, with a limited exception: at paras. 31-34. The exception, founded in the Australian case of Doodeward v. Spence (1908), 6 C.L.R. 406 at 414 (H.C.A.), allowed for ownership where:
a person has by the lawful exercise of work or skill so dealt with a human body or part of a human body in his lawful possession that it has acquired some attributes differentiating it from a mere corpse awaiting burial …
[26] The court reviewed more recent English cases that have also held that ownership of parts of a human corpse are not allowed unless they fit into the exception of Doodeward: Yearworth, at paras. 34-36.
[27] Finally, the court considered jurisprudence on owning parts and products of a living human body. Without any English precedent to assist them, they turned to two cases from California: Moore v. Regents of the University of California, 51 Cal. (3d) 120 (Sup. Ct. 1990) and Hecht v. The Superior Court of Los Angeles County, 16 Cal. App. (4th) 836 (Ct. App. 1993). In Moore, the court disallowed the plaintiff’s claim for ownership over organ tissue removed during surgery. The court in Hecht found that a testator’s semen sample did amount to property for the purpose of being disposed of under his will. These cases will be discussed in more detail below.
[28] Upon the facts of Yearworth, the court, in finding it was time for advancement in the “common law’s treatment of and approach to the issue of ownership of parts or products of a living human body”, ultimately concluded that the plaintiffs had a property interest in the semen samples: at para. 45(a), 45(f). However, they declined to so find on the basis of the principle in Doodeward stating, “We are not content to see the common law in this area founded upon the principle in Doodeward”: at para. 45(d). They further explained their refusal to follow Doodeward at para. 45(d):
(d) ... Such ancestry does not commend it as a solid foundation. Moreover a distinction between the capacity to own body parts or products which have, and which have not, been subject to the exercise of work or skill is not entirely logical. Why, for example, should the surgeon presented with a part of the body, for example, a finger which has been amputated in a factory accident, with a view to re-attaching it to the injured hand, but who carelessly damages it before starting the necessary medical procedures, be able to escape liability on the footing that the body part had not been subject to the exercise of work or skill which had changed its attributes?
[29] The court’s finding of sperm as property was based on the following reasoning at para. 45(f):
(f) In our judgment, for the purposes of their claims in negligence, the men had ownership of the sperm which they ejaculated:
(i) By their bodies, they alone generated and ejaculated the sperm.
(ii) The sole object of their ejaculation of the sperm was that, in certain events, it might later be used for their benefit. ...
(iii) Ancillary to the object of later possible use of the sperm is the need for its storage in the interim. ...
(iv) The analysis of rights relating to use and storage in (ii) and (iii) above must be considered in context, namely that, while the licence-holder has duties which may conflict with the wishes of the men, for example in relation to destruction of the sperm upon expiry of the maximum storage period, no person, whether human or corporate, other than each man has any rights in relation to the sperm which he has produced.
(v) In reaching our conclusion that the men had ownership of the sperm for the purposes of their present claims, we are fortified by the precise correlation between the primary, if circumscribed, rights of the men in relation to the sperm, namely in relation to its future use, and the consequence of the Trust's breach of duty, namely preclusion of its future use.
[30] The U.S. cases cited by the claimant all arose in the course of divorce and disputes over the use and possession of frozen embryos. In the first case, from Tennessee, Davis v. Davis, 842 S.W. 2d 588 (Sup. Ct. 1992), the parties attempted to have a child by in vitro fertilization using Ms. Davis’s ova and Mr. Davis’s sperm. They were unsuccessful. After their marriage broke down, there were still frozen embryos remaining. Ms. Davis wished to donate the frozen embryos to another couple. Mr. Davis wished the frozen embryos to be destroyed.
[31] The court considered whether the frozen embryos were property. It stated at 597:
We conclude that pre-embryos are not, strictly speaking, either "persons" or "property," but occupy an interim category that entitles them to special respect because of their potential for human life. It follows that any interest that Mary Sue Davis and Junior Davis have in the pre-embryos in this case is not a true property interest. However, they do have an interest in the nature of ownership, to the extent that they have decision-making authority concerning disposition of the pre-embryos, within the scope of policy set by law.
[32] Absent an agreement between the parties for disposition of the unused embryos, the case was decided by balancing the right to procreate with the right to avoid procreation. In this case, the balance fell in favour of Mr. Davis, particularly as Ms. Davis’s intent was to donate the frozen embryos and not to use them herself: at 597-598, 603-604.
[33] The claimant cites five additional U.S. cases involving disputes over frozen embryos: Kass v. Kass, 91 N.Y. (2d) 554 (Ct. App. 1998); A.Z. v. B.Z., 431 Mass. 150 (Sup. Jud. Ct. 2000); J.B. v. M.B., 783 A. (2d) 707 (N.J. Sup. Ct. 2001); Litowitz v. Litowitz, 146 Wash. (2d) 514 (Sup. Ct. 2002) and In the Matter of the Marriage of Dahl and Angle, 222 Or. App. 572 (Ct. App. 2008).
[34] In Kass, the court agreed with Davis that agreements between the parties regarding the disposition of the frozen embryos on the dissolution of the marriage, or any other contingency, should be honoured: at 565. The court found the parties had previously agreed to donate the embryos to research should they be unable to come to a consensus on a disposition in the event of a divorce: at 562. The agreement was enforced.
[35] The courts in A.Z. and J.B. both looked to previous agreements of the parties in order to determine their intention. However, finding them legally insufficient or ambiguous, the court instead weighed the right to procreate with the right not to procreate. They both found in favour of the right to avoid procreation.
[36] In Litowitz, the couple involved received an ovum from a third party and, using Mr. Litowitz’s sperm, had a surrogate carry their child. When their marriage broke down, a dispute arose over the remaining frozen embryos. The court based its decision solely on the contractual rights of the parties under the contract with the fertility centre. In that contract, the parties had agreed to allow the court to resolve the issue of the remaining embryos should they be unable to agree: at 519. The parties had also expressed a desire in the agreement to have the embryos thaw and expire after five years. Since the five years had expired, the court ordered the embryos thawed: 533-534.
[37] Finally, in Dahl, the court upheld the parties’ agreement to have the wife instruct the fertility centre what to do with the frozen embryos if the parties could not agree: at 583. In this case, the wife wished the frozen embryos to be destroyed (or donated to research); the husband wished to have them donated for implantation. In the course of their decision, the court discussed whether the embryos were marital property at 579-581:
... Marital property "constitutes the entire class of property subject to the dispositional authority of the court in a marital dissolution action." Massee and Massee, 328 Or 195, 206, 970 P2d 1203 (1999). Given the statutory language, we first must determine whether the contractual right to dispose of frozen embryos is "personal property" for purposes of the statute. If it is not, then the court has no authority in a dissolution proceeding or judgment to deal with those contractual rights. If the court does have such authority, we will need to determine what distribution of that property is just and proper in all the circumstances.
...
Indeed, although the language of the embryo storage agreement does not control what constitutes personal property under ORS 107.105, it does indicate that the parties understood that husband and wife had the "exclusive right to possess, use, enjoy, or dispose of" frozen embryos that were stored under the agreement. ...
...
We acknowledge that there is some inherent awkwardness in describing those contractual rights as "personal property," as we discuss in more detail below. However, we nonetheless conclude that the contractual right to possess or dispose of the frozen embryos is personal property that is subject to a "just and proper" division ... The trial court did not err in treating it as such.
Given that conclusion, the question of what constitutes a just and proper distribution of that right presents a significantly more difficult question. The division of property rarely gives rise to this level of deeply emotional conflict and, notwithstanding the idea that some properties are unique and personally meaningful, a decision to award particular property to a party generally can be considered to be a decision that is ultimately measured in monetary (or equivalent) value. A decision about the contractual right to direct the disposition of embryos cannot reasonably be viewed that way, as the parties appear to agree. As such, our case law controlling the just and proper distribution of property in a marital dissolution proceeding--all of which addresses the distribution of property to which some sort of monetary value can be ascribed--offers little assistance in our task here. Nor can we identify any express source of public policy in our constitution, statutes, administrative rules, or elsewhere that could inform the distribution of property of this nature.
[38] The claimant submits that the U.S. cases stand for the proposition that the “pivotal question is whether procreation creates a parental obligation on the party who wants to restrain procreation.” Where it does not, the gametes must be treated as property.
[39] The respondent submits that there is no Canadian legislation, federal or provincial, or Canadian case law that treats gametes as property. She argues the issue of treating sperm as property is a moral one. She states that the question of whether sperm is property should be answered in the negative.
[40] The respondent cites several academics in support of her position. In her article “Sperm as Property” (1995) 6:2 Stan. L. & Pol’y Rev. 57, Dr. Bonnie Steinbock discusses the moral issues surrounding treating sperm as property. She argues at 57 that:
To characterize something as property suggests that certain things may be done with it ... If there are entities that ought not to be treated in these ways, if, that is, there are good moral reasons why they should not be treated in these ways, then they should not be considered as property.
[41] She discusses the U.S. cases of Hecht, Moore and Davis, focusing mainly on Hecht.
[42] She notes that in Moore, the court “declined to answer the question of how much of the law of property applies to body parts”: at 59-60. Instead, they found that courts should turn to statute “for guidance on the disposition of human biological materials”: Moore, at 137; see also Steinbock, at 59-60.
[43] Dr. Steinbock points out that this approach was followed in Hecht: Steinbock, at 60. Hecht, as was noted above, involved a dispute over whether a deceased testator could bequeath his frozen semen to his girlfriend. The court found that the testator had, at the time of his death, an interest in his sperm and that the sperm would constitute property under the applicable probate legislation; general property law did not govern under the circumstances. The court cited Davis, noting that the interest was in an “interim category” given the sperm’s “potential for human life”: Hecht, at 846.
[44] Dr. Steinbock stated at 60:
Thus, Hecht, Moore and Davis all represent judicial decisions to eschew a categorical approach to the ownership issues raised by disputes over bodily parts and gametes. In this new and challenging area, the law is shaped by application of public policy to the unique facts of each case.
[45] Dr. Steinbock discusses three possible moral issues with sperm as property: posthumous reproduction (as arose in Hecht), the commercialization of reproduction and the treating of the body as a commodity: at 62-66.
[46] She concludes that it is only after we determine the purpose the sperm will be used for that we will be able to determine whether it is property: at 62, 66. For example, she states, “If there is a strong moral, legal, or policy argument against allowing individuals to store sperm for the purpose of posthumous reproduction, then sperm should not be considered property for that purpose”: at 66.
[47] I note that since the Steinbock article was written, the California Court of Appeal has once again heard a petition from Ms. Hecht: see Hecht v. The Superior Court of Los Angeles County, 50 Cal. App. 4th 1289 (1996) [Hecht, 1996] (Note: this case was ordered not to be published in the Official Reports by the Supreme Court of California on January 15, 1997: see 1997 Cal. LEXIS 131). With the direction that the testator had a property interest in the sperm for the purposes of disposing of it in his will, the Court of Appeal had sent the matter back to the trial court. There, the court had given Ms. Hecht 20% of the sperm vials based on a settlement agreement of the dispute between herself and the testator’s children over the will. She was awarded three of the 15 sperm vials. She petitioned for the remaining vials, but was denied. She appealed: Hecht, 1996, at 1293-1294.
[48] The Court of Appeal addressed under which legal instrument the sperm vials should be disposed of: the will or the settlement agreement. The court stated that the sperm was a “unique form of “property”” and was “not subject to division through an agreement”: at 1295. While Ms. Hecht could use the sperm vials to conceive her deceased boyfriend’s child, even she was not legally entitled to sell or donate the sperm to another. The disposition was determined only by the intent of the donor; the sperm was property for him only: at 1295-1296.
[49] The respondent cites two other scholarly articles in support of her application. The first is from Dr. Ernest Waintraub entitled “Are Sperm Cells a Form of Property? A Biological Inquiry into the Legal Status of the Sperm Cell” (2007-2008) 11 Quinnipiac Health L.J. 1. Dr. Waintraub cites the Davis and Hecht cases and discusses the courts’ position that a frozen embryo is neither a person nor property, but an “interim category”: at 1–7.
[50] Dr. Waintraub discusses the biology of sperm. He notes that sperm is “an indispensible contributor to the creation of a person” and it is from this that it derives its value: at 11.
[51] Dr. Waintraub notes that critics of the Hecht decision argue the only way to predictably and consistently determine disputes resulting from the disposition of sperm will be in property law. Scientific advancements that legislation cannot keep up with, as well as the inadequacy of other areas of the law to compensate for lost sperm (the example given is identical to the facts from Yearworth), result in property law being the appropriate choice for these actions. He rejects these arguments noting that an action in negligence would give rise to mental anguish and other claims not known in property law. He also points out that property law may give rise to circumstance where the donor’s kin is making determinations for the sperm’s disposition if the donor dies without outlining his intent. This may lead to a disposition inconsistent with the donor’s wishes: at 14.
[52] Dr. Waintraub concludes that the Hecht decision was “rightly decided” in that it aligns with scientific conclusions. He states that property law is not the proper tool to analyze legal issues arising from stored sperm: at 16.
[53] Finally, the respondent cites Heidi P. Forster’s article “Law and Ethics Meet: When Couples Fight Over their Frozen Embryos” (2000) 21:4 Journal of Andrology 512. The author reaches the following conclusions regarding the consensus of the case law for disputes over frozen embryos at 514:
1. Embryos are considered neither persons nor property, but “special entities” that have the potential to become persons and, therefore, warrant respect;
2. Pre-procedural agreements between couples regarding the disposition of the embryos should be considered a binding contract;
3. In the absence of such an agreement, the party wishing to avoid procreation should be awarded the embryos, except in circumstances where the other party has no other way of becoming a parent; and
4. The rights of both donors should be considered equally.
Analysis
[54] I will start this analysis by first commenting that I appreciate that this is a difficult situation for both parties. In determining whether the sperm donation they used to conceive their children is property, I am in no way devaluing the nature of the substance at issue. I do recognize that sperm used to conceive two children for two loving parents does not have the same emotional status as a vehicle or a home. Ultimately, however, this claim involves a dispute over the sperm straws and their disposition. The claimant wishes to use them to conceive another child; the respondent wishes to have them destroyed. I must, therefore, use the tools at my disposal to make a determination on whether the sperm straws are property and, if so, how they should be divided between the parties. There is no intent on my part to trivialize this matter.
[55] After careful consideration of the authorities provided to me, I am persuaded that on the facts of this case the sperm straws that remain at Genesis should be treated as property and divided between the claimant and respondent as such. I rely mainly on the Canadian case of C.C. and the U.K. case of Yearworth, although I recognize that there are important distinctions between those cases and the facts before me.
[56] While the case of C.C. involved a dispute over frozen embryos, in my view many of its facts are analogous to the case before me. In C.C., the sperm used to conceive the twins was given as a gift to the plaintiff. Here, the parties purchased the sperm. Either way, were the sperm to be considered property it would be the property of the person(s) to whom it was given or by whom it was purchased. The starting point is, therefore, the same in both cases.
[57] The court in C.C. had no reservations about finding that the sperm became the property of the plaintiff to do with as she chose once it was given to her. In my view, this simple approach is equally applicable to the facts of this case. Once the claimant and respondent purchased the sperm straws, those sperm straws were their property to be used for their benefit.
[58] Further support for this position is found in the Yearworth case. This decision provided a much more detailed basis for a finding of sperm as property. As is acknowledged in that case, typically the common law did not allow for human beings, living or deceased, or their body parts and products to be considered property. This was, no doubt, for good reason. However, I agree with the court of appeal’s finding that medical science has advanced to a point where the common law requires rethinking of this point.
[59] It is helpful to return to how the court commenced its analysis for the purposes of the claim in negligence at para. 28:
28. A decision whether something is capable of being owned cannot be reached in a vacuum. It must be reached in context; and in this section of our judgment the context is whether an action in tort may be brought for loss of the sperm consequent upon breach of the Trust's duty to take reasonable care of it. The concept of ownership is no more than a convenient global description of different collections of rights held by persons over physical and other things. In his classic essay on "Ownership" (Oxford Essays in Jurisprudence, OUP, 1961, Chapter V) Professor Honoré identified 11 standard incidents of ownership but stressed that not all of them had to be present for ownership to arise. He suggested that the second incident was "the right to use" and he added, at p.116, that:
"The right (liberty) to use at one's discretion has rightly been recognised as a cardinal feature of ownership and the fact that … certain limitations on use also fall within the standard incidents of ownership does not detract from its importance…"
We have no doubt that, in deciding whether sperm is capable of being owned for the purpose which we have identified, part of our enquiry must be into the existence or otherwise of a nexus between the incident of ownership most strongly demonstrated by the facts of the case (surely here, the right, albeit limited, of the men to use the sperm) and the nature of the damage consequent upon the breach of the duty of care (here, their inability to use it notwithstanding that this was the specific purpose for which it was generated).
[60] Surely, here the parties, having purchased the sperm straws, have the choice to use them. In fact, unlike the circumstances in Yearworth, the parties here did use the sperm straws. They had two children from that use. While there may be a limit on the use the parties can make of the gametes and while they may be prohibited from certain uses of the sperm by the Assisted Human Reproduction Act, S.C. 2004, c. 2 (this point was not argued before me and, therefore, remains unclear) they still can use and have used the sperm. As well, I note that the plaintiffs in Yearworth were also limited in the use of their sperm by legislation.
[61] There are some difficulties with applying the Yearworth decision to the facts of the case before me. The court based its finding of the men’s sperm as property on the basis that the men were the donors of that semen. They had ejaculated it. The intention was to use it for their benefit in the future if necessary: at para. 45(f).
[62] Furthermore, the court stated explicitly that “for the purposes of their claims in negligence, the men had ownership of the sperm”: at para. 45(f) [emphasis added].
[63] In this case, I am dealing neither with a claim in negligence nor sperm that came from either of the parties. I do not find, though, that this makes the need for advancements in the common law to keep up with medical science to be any less compelling. In fact, the Court of Appeal in Yearworth concluded that advances were needed in common law regarding the issue of ownership of body parts and products for the purposes of the negligence claim before them as well as for other purposes: at para. 45(a). Additionally, while the court was making a determination regarding semen samples intended to be used by the men who had produced them, they did not ignore that sperm could be owned by another; they simply pointed out they were not asked to determine this point: at para. 45(b).
[64] Overall, I find that along with the parties’ right to use the sperm straws for their benefit, the parties have an ownership interest in the sperm straws.
[65] I do not find the U.S. cases cited by the claimant to be of much assistance in this case. They deal with frozen embryos where, in most cases, the parties each contributed a gamete.
[66] I do note that they assist the claimant’s case in that embryos have more “potential for human life” than a gamete alone. Accordingly, the argument that sperm is in the same “interim category” between person and property is not as compelling.
[67] I do agree, however, with the claimant that the U.S. cases demonstrate the importance of balancing the right to procreate with the right to avoid procreation. But there is no need to balance these rights in this case. A.N.A. will not be the biological parent of any child conceived using the sperm straws. She will not have any parental obligations or responsibilities to any child conceived whether the child is conceived by T.L. or J.C.M. A.N.A.’s right to avoid procreation is not being infringed by dividing the sperm straws between the owners as property.
[68] I have also considered the respondent’s arguments, but I find I must reject them for several reasons. First, the court is ill equipped to handle moral and philosophical arguments. While I appreciate the approach suggested by Dr. Steinbock, it is not the role of the court to choose the correct approach to such existential questions. As well, Dr. Steinbock’s assertion that we first need to determine what “may permissibly be done” with sperm – i.e. whether it can be donated, sold, stored etc. - before we can determine whether it is property is of no help here. In this case, the sperm has already been donated, sold and stored.
[69] Second, it is clear to me in the context of this dispute that the sperm is the property of the parties. The sperm has been treated as property by everyone involved in the transaction, from the donor to Xytex, Genesis and the parties. It has been purchased; the parties have a right to deal with it. They have made use of it to their benefit. The respondent’s moral objections to the commercialization of reproduction or the commoditization of the body seem to me to be too late. Certainly, they are interesting arguments for the respondent herself to make given she participated in purchasing and using a donation of sperm from an anonymous donor.
[70] I recognize that in Canada the federal government has prohibited the purchase of sperm (and ova). Section 7(1) of the Assisted Human Reproduction Act reads:
Purchase of gametes
7. (1) No person shall purchase, offer to purchase or advertise for the purchase of sperm or ova from a donor or a person acting on behalf of a donor.
(While much of this Act was recently declared ultra vires the federal government in the recent Supreme Court of Canada decision Reference re Assisted Human Reproduction Act, 2010 SCC 61, section 7 was not challenged: at para. 10.) However, for the reason outlined above, that the sperm has been treated as property up until this point, in my view the legislation does not dictate or even influence whether or not the gametes in this case are property.
[71] Furthermore, I note that in her article Dr. Steinbock acknowledges that, while not ordinarily the case, a person can own property he/she is not entitled to sell. The example she gives is of the Queen of England, who owns land and artifacts she is not entitled to dispose of: Steinbock, at 61.
[72] Third, I do not find either the Waintraub or Forster articles helpful to the respondent’s case. The Forster article addresses the same US cases cited by the claimant. It offers nothing towards an analysis of whether or not sperm should be treated as property.
[73] The Waintraub article opines that property law is not the proper area of law to address issues arising from sperm donation. He suggests other areas, such as negligence, as being more helpful. This is not the reality of the case before me, however. There is no claim in negligence here.
[74] Furthermore, Dr. Waintraub applauds the Hecht case for finding that property law should not govern the disposition of the testator’s sperm. The testator’s sperm could not otherwise be disposed of by agreement of others, but only by his own intent. Even the beneficiary of the bequest could not dispose of the sperm. We are well past that point on the facts of this case. The donor has provided his sperm, by sale or donation, to Xytex (or to another party from whom Xytex acquired it). The parties then purchased the sperm from Xytex. For that reason, even if I found Hecht applicable to these circumstances, the precedent it establishes has already been made inapplicable. Consequently, this analysis is of little help.
[75] On the facts of this case, I find that the gametes should be treated as property for the purpose of dividing them upon the dissolution of the spousal relationship of the parties. The parties are joint owners of the sperm they used in their successful attempts to conceive children. I will deal with the division after I address issues 2 and 3.
Issue 2: Is it relevant for the court to consider the best interests of the existing children and any future donor offspring when deciding whether the claimant should be awarded the sperm straws?
[76] The respondent argues that an order awarding the sperm vials to J.C.M. is not in the best interests of their two children. She argues it is not in the best interests of any child to be conceived using the sperm. She states that the birth of another half-sibling to two children who are already half-siblings “complicates and further fragments the two households currently established” by J.C.M. and herself. Furthermore, if J.C.M.’s and T.L.’s relationship were to fail, three children would be split among three households and three families.
[77] The respondent relies on findings made by Madam Justice Adair in Pratten v. British Columbia (Attorney General), 2011 BCSC 656. In Pratten, the plaintiff was conceived through insemination with sperm from an anonymous donor. Ms. Pratten wished to discover information about her biological father, but found that there was no legal basis on which she was entitled to the information. She brought a constitutional challenge based on ss. 15 and 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The s. 15 claim sought the government’s recognition of the “questions about biological origins and feelings of loss and incompleteness” experienced by adoptees through the enactment of the Adoption Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 5: at paras. 3, 6. Through the Adoption Act, information about adoptees must be recorded and preserved. Adoptees also have the opportunity to access that information. No such legislation applied to donor offspring.
[78] The argument for a violation of s. 7 was that donor offspring’s liberty and security rights were infringed as the Province had failed to protect “fundamental aspects of their personal autonomy and health” through legislation: at para. 7.
[79] Madam Justice Adair made the following findings regarding the circumstances of anonymous donor offspring, which are relied on by the respondent in this case, at para. 111:
[111] I summarize my findings and conclusions, based on this evidence, as follows:
(a) donor offspring fear that their health can be compromised, and may be seriously compromised, by the lack of information about their donor. ...;
(b) because of a lack of information, donor offspring can face delayed medical treatment, and an inability to have conditions that are inherited or genetic diagnosed and treated. ...;
(c) it is important, psychologically and medically, for donor offspring to have the ability to know identifying and non-identifying information about their donor, and their psychological and medical needs in that respect are substantially the same as adoptees;
(d) for donor offspring, having information – both identifying and non-identifying – matters deeply, both to complete their personal identities and to alleviate the stress, anxiety and frustration caused by not knowing. ...;
(e) donor offspring experience sadness, frustration, depression and anxiety – in other words, they suffer psychological and psychosocial difficulties – when they are unable to obtain information. They feel the effects both for themselves and, when they become parents, for their own children;
(f) donor offspring commonly, and legitimately, fear inadvertent consanguinity. ...;
(g) the secrecy that often surrounds the process of conception, even when done with the best of intentions, can have devastating effects on donor offspring when the truth is revealed. Moreover, knowing the truth (that the other biological parent was a donor), but having no means to discover what the truth means for one’s life, can be a significant source of anxiety, depression and frustration for donor offspring;
(h) while recognizing that parents have an important and legitimate interest in deciding what their child will know and when she or he will know it, anonymity and secrecy tips the balance heavily in favour of donors and parents, and away from the best interests of donor offspring; and
(i) donor offspring and adoptees experience similar struggles, and a similar sense of loss and incompleteness. However, donor offspring do not have the benefit of the kind of positive institutions and legislative support provided to and for adoptees in B.C.
[80] The claimant argues that an analysis by the court regarding the best interests of the children, existing or potential, has no place in this petition. She says that whether the children are affected by an additional child in the family is not relevant to her right to procreate. The respondent is attempting to restrict the claimant’s and her partner’s right to procreate by having the court complete an analysis on the best interests of the children. The claimant states the respondent is using the best interests of the children as a “proxy for her interests.”
[81] Furthermore, the claimant points out that the respondent could not obtain an order restricting the claimant from finding the original sperm donor and obtaining more semen. She would also be unable to obtain an order restricting the claimant from having another child herself; that child would be biologically related to one of their children.
Analysis
[82] In my view, an analysis of the best interests of the children born to the parties, as well as any potential child conceived by the claimant and her partner, is not appropriate on the circumstances of this case.
[83] In regard to a child who may possibly be conceived using the sperm donation jointly purchased by the parties, an analysis of the best interests of that child is, at best, speculative. Accordingly, it would be both impractical and improper for me to engage in such an exercise.
[84] I take no exception to the findings of fact made by Madam Justice Adair in Pratten with respect to children born of anonymous sperm donors. However, those facts were found in an entirely different context than the case before me. As will be discussed further below, the issue in that case had to do with disclosure of medical, social and personal information of sperm donors to their biological children. The findings from Pratten have no role to play in a case where two former partners have a dispute over the use of gametes they jointly purchased.
[85] With respect to the children’s best interests, I also decline to engage in such an analysis. Hypothetically, if this case involved a male, A, and a female, B, B would not be able to stop A from fathering children with as many other females as he wished. The children conceived by the other females would all be half siblings of B’s children. Yet, B would have no right based on the best interests of her children to restrict A’s right to procreate. I do not see why this situation should be any different. In fact, for me to engage in any such analysis would be borderline discriminatory to couples, such as the parties, who must conceive through sperm donation should they wish to have children that are biologically their own.
[86] For these reasons I will not engage in a discussion of the best interests of the children.
Issue 3: Is insemination from an anonymous donor proscribed in British Columbia?
[87] The respondent submits that based on the Pratten decision, anonymous sperm donation is proscribed in British Columbia. Her argument goes as follows. The Province argued in Pratten that “Ms. Pratten seeks an unprecedented remedy, and that, in effect, she seeks to have an entire legislative scheme – one that would prohibit, both prospectively and retrospectively, anonymous gamete donation – created by judicial degree”: at para. 10. Despite this argument, the court found that assisted reproduction using anonymous sperm donation is not in the best interests of donor offspring: at para. 215. The court also found the Adoption Act and the Adoption Regulation, with a limited exception, violated s. 15 of the Charter because they created a distinction between adoptees and donor offspring that is discriminatory. Accordingly, the respondent says, the potential result asserted by the Province was realized.
[88] The claimant argues that the respondent’s interpretation of Pratten is not correct. She says that Pratten concerned keeping records for anonymous sperm donations, not about conceiving with anonymous sperm donations.
[89] The claimant says that Pratten does not restrict an individual’s right to obtain and use anonymous sperm donation in B.C. It is simply a Charter case directed at the Province’s failure to protect donor offspring. She acknowledges that in the future it may require fertility clinics in B.C. to use only the sperm donated by those willing to release their identity. Nevertheless, it has no application in the case before this court.
[90] The claimant argues Pratten does not require the production of records from other jurisdictions, such as in this case where the records, if there are any, are in the U.S.
Analysis
[91] I do not accept the respondent’s assertion that I should determine this application on the basis that anonymous sperm donation is proscribed in British Columbia. I come to this conclusion for several reasons.
[92] The first two reasons have to do with procedural aspects of Pratten. The declaration that the Adoption Act and the Adoption Regulation unjustifiably contravened s. 15 of the Charter was stayed for 15 months from the date of judgment of May 19, 2011. Furthermore, Pratten is on appeal to the British Columbia Court of Appeal. It was heard February 14 and 15, 2012. Judgment was reserved. Accordingly, Pratten itself has not been fully resolved.
[93] Moreover, a determination by this court regarding the legality of anonymous sperm donation in B.C. is outside the scope of this application. Substantively, Pratten dealt with the larger social issue of whether donor offspring should be entitled to information regarding their origins in the same manner as adopted children are. This case before me requires a determination of the disposition of gametes bought by the parties in order to conceive children. There is no basis for me to make sweeping declarations regarding the legality of anonymous sperm donation in British Columbia.
[94] In any event, the sperm here has already been donated anonymously. The parties have already purchased it. Even if Pratten were to hold what the respondent asserts it does, it is too late to apply in this case.
Issue 4: If the answer to issue 1 is yes, how should the sperm straws be divided amongst the claimant and the respondent?
[95] The parties lived in a spousal relationship. Upon the dissolution of that relationship they entered into an agreement to divide their joint assets. Clearly, they had it in mind to divide their assets fairly. However, they inadvertently failed to divide the sperm straws they had jointly purchased.
[96] As is consistent with their approach, I find that the remaining 13 gametes should be divided between the parties. Assuming it is not possible, or that it is impractical, to divide one sperm straw in half, I award seven sperm straws to the claimant, J.C.M., and six sperm straws to the respondent, A.N.A. J.C.M. will pay A.N.A. $125 for the extra one-half straw she is receiving. Should A.N.A. wish to sell her share of the gametes to J.C. M. that will be her prerogative. She may dispose of them as she wishes.
Costs
[97] Due to the nature of this case, I think it appropriate that each party bear their own costs.
“L.D. Russell J.”
_______________________________________
The Honourable Madam Justice Loryl D. Russell

Thursday, April 26, 2012

G20 activist to launch $4-million lawsuit

An undercover provincial police officer drove drunk, gave alcohol to minors, staged a fake illegal cigarette buy and encouraged protesters to damage property during an investigation before the 2010 G20 summit in Toronto, an Ontario activist alleges in a lawsuit.
These accusations – which have not been tested in court – are contained in a Notice of Claim for a $4-million suit by Julian Ichim against the officer, Constable Bindo Showan, the Ontario Provincial Police, the Toronto Police Services Board and the provincial Attorney-General.
On Wednesday, Mr. Ichim served the Attorney-General's office with the Notice of Claim; the Statement of Claim will be filed at Superior Court within 60 days, his legal team said.
Constable Showan posed as an activist in Kitchener-Waterloo and Guelph for about a year and a half before the G20. He befriended protest organizers and attended meetings to plan demonstrations against the summit and the Vancouver Olympics.
A spokesman for the OPP said the force would not comment on a case before the courts.
Ministry is in receipt of a notice of claim in this matter, said Attorney-General’s spokesman Brendan Crawley in an e-mail. “If an action is commenced we will defend the action.”
Mr. Ichim, who helped organize an anti-G20 protest, was arrested on June 26, 2010 and charged with conspiracy to commit mischief. His charges were withdrawn a few months later. Mr. Ichim says his arrest was illegal and was meant solely to stop him from taking part in activism.
Mr. Ichim alleges Constable Showan, who went by the alias “Khalid Mohammed” while undercover, went beyond what was necessary in his investigation in the extent to which he became involved in the activist’s life.
He says Constable Showan went to great lengths – including breaking the law – to curry favour with the people he was spying on.
“Showan provided alcohol to persons who were not of age,” Mr. Ichim’s Notice of Claim says. “Showan drove his van while intoxicated and while under the influence of alcohol and thereby endangered [Mr. Ichim] and the public.”
During protests against the Hanlon Creek Business Park, a development in Guelph, Mr. Ichim alleges Constable Showan encouraged “violence and criminal activity,” including sabotaging construction equipment.
The claim also that in Sept. 2009 Constable Showan, with the help of other officers, pretended to illegally buy nine cartons of cigarettes in Brantford, Ont., and drive them to nearby Milton to impress Mr. Ichim.
Mr. Ichim says Constable Showan also took notes on his sex life, which were presented to other defendants to embarrass him.
He also alleges the OPP used one activist, someone Mr. Ichim had known for years, as a confidential informant.
Mr. Ichim took part in protests during the week before the G20. On the Saturday morning, before the protests, he was arrested by plainclothes police at a Tim Hortons near Allan Gardens in downtown Toronto. During the arrest, Mr. Ichim alleges, officers punched and kicked him and did not inform him of his rights to remain silent and speak with a lawyer. Then, at the temporary detention centre, he says he was not allowed to speak to a lawyer and had no access to food or medical attention.
The investigation by Constable Showan and fellow OPP officer Brenda Carey ultimately led to conspiracy charges against 21 people. Fifteen of them had their charges withdrawn. Six others pleaded guilty last fall to reduced charges of counselling to commit mischief.
Five of them were given prison sentences ranging from three months to over a year. Alex Hundert is still awaiting sentencing.
Last year, Mr. Ichim was charged with disobeying a court order for detailing his experiences with Constable Showan on his blog. At the time, the officer’s name was under a court-ordered publication ban. Mr. Ichim did not refer to him by name, but by his alias, Khalid Mohammed.