Supreme Court Of Canada To Consider Dichotomy Between Policy And Operational Decisions In Negligence Claims

Published date25 August 2020
Subject MatterLitigation, Mediation & Arbitration, Trials & Appeals & Compensation, Professional Negligence
Law FirmMiller Thomson LLP
AuthorMr Nico McKay

The Supreme Court of Canada has recently granted leave to appeal the decision of the B.C. Court of Appeal in Marchi v Nelson (City of), 2020 BCCA 1. The key question on appeal is whether certain acts or omissions on the part of the City of Nelson (the "City") should be considered policy decisions and thus ought to be insulated from judicial scrutiny.

Factual Background

This action is a negligence claim arising out of an injury sustained by the Respondent, Ms. Marchi. Following a heavy snowfall in January of 2015, the City cleared snow on the downtown streets in a manner that created snowbanks along the street's curb and onto the sidewalk. Ms. Marchi parked her car on the side of the street and encountered a snowbank between her vehicle and the sidewalk. As Ms. Marchi attempted to cross the snowbank, her right foot fell through and she injured her leg. She was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital.

Ms. Marchi sued the City for negligence, arguing that it should have constructed openings in the snowbanks to allow safe access from the street onto the sidewalk.

British Columbia Supreme Court Decision

At the BC Supreme Court, Justice McEwan held that the City's snow-clearing actions resulted from policy decisions governed by social and economic factors, including the availability of manual labour and equipment. As public authorities can only be held liable in negligence for policy decisions made in bad faith or by an improper exercise in discretion, Justice McEwan found that the City did not owe a duty of care in the matter at hand.

Alternatively, Justice McEwan held that if the City did not have a policy defence and thus owed a duty of care towards Ms. Marchi the City's policy was rational and reasonable, and Ms. Marchi had assumed the risk of stepping on the snowbank.

Concluding that the City's decisions were immune from liability, Justice McEwan dismissed the action.

British Columbia Court of Appeal Decision

The BC Court of Appeal overturned the Supreme Court's decision, holding that Justice McEwan failed to "identify the types of governmental decisions that should be insulated from judicial scrutiny."

In a unanimous decision, Justice Willcock found that the trial court erred in accepting that all of the City's decisions regarding snow-clearing were policy decisions, and stated that certain actions taken by the City may have been properly characterized as operational. The Court relied on the Supreme Court of Canada's reasoning in Just v British Columbia,...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT