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Repair of Roads: Municipal Maintenance Duties
Question: Can you sue for car damage caused by potholes in Canada?
Answer: If your vehicle suffers damage from a pothole on a local road, the responsible municipality may be liable under section 44 of the Municipal Act, 2001, S.O. 2001, Chapter 25. This law requires municipalities to keep roads in a reasonable state of repair. Keep in mind that special rules and notice periods apply when suing a governmental body. Want clarity on your rights?
Answer: Contact Olson Craig Legal today for a free consultation.
If a Car Is Damaged By a Pothole, Can the City Be Held Liable?
Generally, When a Poorly Maintained Road Causes Damage or Injuries, a Local Municipality May Be Liable As Laws Require the Municipality to Reasonably Perform Maintenance. Special Rules For Suing Government or Municipalities May Apply.
Understanding Municipal Roadway Maintenance Duties Including the Road Surface, Sidewalks, Signs, Trees, and more.
Potholes and other roadway hazards can pose significant risk of injury to persons as well as damage to vehicles, among other things, as property. While many incidents with roadway hazards result in only relatively minor mishaps, serious damage or even severe injuries can result from the failure to properly maintain roadways including failure to maintain incidentals such as signage per The Queen v. Jennings et al., [1966] S.C.R. 532; guardrails, trees per Swinamer v. Nova Scotia (Attorney General), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 445, among other things, that go beyond merely just the roadway surface.
The Law
The legal duty imposed upon the municipality to maintain the roadway is enshrined within section 44 of the Municipal Act, 2001, S.O. 2001, Chapter 25 where it is stated:
Maintenance
44 (1) The municipality that has jurisdiction over a highway or bridge shall keep it in a state of repair that is reasonable in the circumstances, including the character and location of the highway or bridge.
Liability
(2) A municipality that defaults in complying with subsection (1) is, subject to the Negligence Act, liable for all damages any person sustains because of the default.
Defence
(3) Despite subsection (2), a municipality is not liable for failing to keep a highway or bridge in a reasonable state of repair if,
(a) it did not know and could not reasonably have been expected to have known about the state of repair of the highway or bridge;
(b) it took reasonable steps to prevent the default from arising; or
(c) at the time the cause of action arose, minimum standards established under subsection (4) applied to the highway or bridge and to the alleged default and those standards have been met.
Regulations
(4) The Minister of Transportation may make regulations establishing minimum standards of repair for highways and bridges or any class of them.
General or Specific
(5) The minimum standards may be general or specific in their application.
Duties of Repair
The above statutory duty was recently referenced within, and clarified by, the Court of Appeal within the case of Chiocchio v. Hamilton (City), 2018 ONCA 762, wherein it was said:
[8] Section 44 of the Municipal Act, S.O. 2001, c. 25, requires a municipality to keep highways under its jurisdiction “in a state of repair that is reasonable in the circumstances, including the character and location of the highway”.
[9] In Fordham v. Dutton-Dunwich (Municipality), 2014 ONCA 891 (CanLII), 70 M.V.R. 6, at paras. 28-29, Laskin J.A. described the ordinary reasonable driver standard, the standard of care which governs a municipality’s duty of highway repair. As described by Laskin J.A., a municipality is required to prevent or remedy conditions on its roads that create an unreasonable risk of harm for ordinary drivers exercising reasonable care. Ordinary reasonable drivers are not perfect; they make mistakes. However, a municipality's duty does not extend to remedying conditions that pose a risk of harm only because of negligent driving.
Extent of Duty to Repair
It is noted per Chiocchio that the duty upon the municipality is of reasonableness rather than perfection and that the road need maintenance merely to prevent or correct conditions that would pose an unreasonable risk to an ordinary driver, who may make mistakes; however, the obligation upon the municipality is without a duty to prevent or correct conditions that pose a risk to negligent drivers. This viewpoint that a municipality is obligated to maintain the roads to a standard of reasonableness for use by an ordinary driver, rather than negligent driver was also recently articulated in Smith v. Safranyos, 2018 ONCA 760 whereas it was said:
[31] “Non-repair” will be established if the plaintiff proves “on a balance of probabilities that the municipality failed to keep the road in question in a reasonable state of repair”: Fordham, at para. 26. The applicable legal test is, “was the road at the material time sufficiently in repair that those users of the road, exercising ordinary or reasonable care, could use it in safety”: Deering v. Scugog (Township), 2010 ONSC 5502 (CanLII), at para. 100, affirmed 2012 ONCA 386 (CanLII), leave to appeal from C.A. refused [2012] S.C.C.A. No. 351. In adopting the Deering standard of care test, Laskin J.A. elaborated in Fordham, at para. 28, that “ordinary reasonable drivers are not perfect drivers; they make mistakes”, but he cautioned, at para. 29, “a municipality’s duty of reasonable repair does not extend to making its roads safer for negligent drivers.”
In addition to cases where a municipality may be responsible for incidents involving automobiles due to the failure to adequately maintain a roadway, a municipality may also be responsible for incidents involving a pedestrian; Bellefleur v. London (City), (2002) 33 M.P.L.R. (3d) 252, a cyclist; Danco v. Thunder Bay (City), (2002) 21 M.P.L.R. (3d) 18, or a person upon roller blades; Winter v. London (City of), 2002 CanLII 15580. Generally speaking, municipalities may also be responsible for incidents that involve any reasonably foreseeable user of a roadway.
Concerns to Consider
The statutorily imposed municipal duties regarding roadway repairs are extensive and often involve legal definitions and interpretations that vary from common vernacular; and accordingly, careful review of the statutory definitions as well as the common law cases embodying judicial interpretations is crucially important when considering litigation against a municipality.
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Conclusion
The statutory law, being the Municipal Act, 2001, quite clearly imposes a duty upon municipalities to reasonably maintain roadways. The common law cases subsequently articulate the standard of measure for the reasonableness required as being sufficient to make the roads safe for the diligent driver rather than the negligent driver.