The Supreme Court of Canada issued a decision at the end of May, 2024 in a case about topsoil. Of course, the case was not only about topsoil. Topsoil just happened to be the subject matter of the contract at the heart of the dispute between the parties. The Supreme Court chose to hear the case because it involved important questions about contracts for the sale of goods and the statutory conditions that are implied through legislation to form part of those contracts.
With the exception of Quebec, all Canadian provinces and territories have a statute governing the sale of goods that is modelled on a 19th-century law from the United Kingdom – the Sale of Goods Act, 1893. That UK legislation codified common law (judge-made, non-statutory) that had developed in the English courts throughout the 19th century. Passed down to Canadian law were three implied obligations that certain sellers of goods can owe to buyers related to the characteristics or properties of the goods sold even though the contract between seller and buyer might not mention the obligations: 1) fitness for purpose (that where the buyer makes known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are to be used, the goods will be reasonably fit for the purpose); 2) merchantability (that the goods sold by description will be of “merchantable” or reasonable quality and fit for sale in the usual course of trade); and, 3) correspondence with description (that goods sold by description will match the seller’s description of the goods).
According to the Supreme Court in its recent decision, those implied obligations were likely imposed by judges to relieve buyers from the harsh effect of the law of “caveat emptor” (buyer beware) that left all of the risk related to the characteristics or properties of the goods on the buyer where the contract was silent on those matters. In Ontario, the Sale of Goods Act contains the three implied obligations of fitness for purpose, merchantability and correspondence with description and makes them implied “conditions” rather than “warranties”. Contractual terms are “conditions” where they are fundamental to the contract: breach of a condition would give the buyer the right to reject the goods from the seller. Contractual terms that are not fundamental to the contract are “warranties”: breach of a warranty would give the buyer a claim for damages but would not entitle the buyer to reject the goods. Where a condition is breached, the buyer would actually have the option to reject the goods or keep the goods and sue for damages (as if a warranty had been breached).
In the case that went to the Supreme Court, the issue was whether or not the parties to a contract for the supply of topsoil had “contracted out” of the implied condition in the Sale of Goods Act that the goods sold by description correspond with the description. Parties don’t have to leave the implied conditions in place – they can use express language in their agreement to say that the implied conditions will not apply.
The buyer in the case was engaged by a municipality to remediate flooding in an area, which involved the removal and replacement of topsoil. The buyer needed topsoil with a specific composition in order to provide the drainage required to solve the flooding problem. The topsoil was sourced from the seller on the basis of the seller’s description, which included laboratory reports based on topsoil samples taken six weeks prior to the eventual delivery of the soil. Although the seller warned that updated test results should be obtained, the buyer had missed project deadlines and wanted immediate delivery of the soil to avoid paying damages to the municipality. The seller and the buyer agreed to go ahead with the transaction and delivery of the soil, but with exclusions of implied conditions. The buyer would have the right to test and approve the topsoil before it was shipped to the site, but if the buyer waived that right the seller would not be responsible for the quality of the topsoil once it left the seller’s facility.
It turned out that the topsoil delivered had substantially more clay content than indicated by the earlier test results. The soil didn’t drain the way it was supposed to and ponding developed on the project site, forcing the buyer to remove the topsoil and replace it with new topsoil that would drain properly. The buyer sued the seller for damages claiming that the seller failed to deliver topsoil that had the composition of the soil shown in the test results that had been provided.
The majority of the members of the Supreme Court (there was one dissenting opinion) sided with the seller, finding that the parties had contracted out of the implied “correspondence with description” condition in the Sale of Goods Act. Although the exclusion language used by the seller and buyer in their contract referred to “quality”, which is arguably something different than the matching of “identity” between the description of the soil (the test results) and the soil as delivered, the Supreme Court found that the buyer had chosen deliberately to assume the risk of not having further testing carried out on the topsoil before delivery. The use of the word “quality” in the exclusion clause didn’t allow the buyer to avoid the objective intention of the exclusion clause – that the seller was not to be held liable for any claim relating to the topsoil.
Read the decision at: 2024 SCC 20 (CanLII).