The Salt Men of Goderich in Ontario’s Court of Chancery:
Ontario Salt Co. v. Merchants Salt Co. and the Judicial
Enforcement of Combinations
W.E. Brett Code
In the 1871 case of Ontario Salt Co. v. Mer-
chants Salt Co., the Ontario Court of Chancery
upheld a cartel formed by salt producers in the
town of Goderich. Feeling the case has been
unjustly neglected and judged only from the
perspective of legal and economic theory, the
author embarks on an analysis of the historical
setting of the case in an attempt to shed new
light on why the court reached the decision
that it did. He weaves together the story of a
short-lived salt boom in a quaint Ontario town,
and reveals political, economic, ideological
and human dimensions in the case which go
beyond the intellectual history of restraint of
trade doctrine.
En 1871, dans l’affaire Ontario Salt Co. c.
Merchants Salt Co., la Court of Chancery de
l’Ontario d6clara valide un cartel form6 par
des producteurs de sel a Goderich. Etant d’avis
que cette d6cision a 6t6 n6glig~e injustement et
qu’on l’a jug~e seulement du point de vue de
la thorie juridique et 6conomique, l’auteur
entreprend une analyse du contexte historique
de la d6cision dans le but d’y apporter un nou-
vel 6clairage. II raconte la p6riode de prospd-
ritd que le sel a apportde dans cette charmante
petite Ville ontarienne et 6voque les aspects
politiques, 6conomiques, idgologiques et hu-
mains de ce jugement, qui l’expliquent peut-
atre mieux qu’une analyse de la doctrine juri-
dique sur les pratiques restrictives du com-
merce.
* LL.B., Faculty of Law, McGill University. The author wishes to thank Blaine Baker and Rich-
ard Janda, without whose enthusiastic support and perceptive criticism this project would not have
been possible. He would also like to thank Nicholas Kasirer and Jeremy Webber for their helpful
comments on a previous draft. The permission granted by Malcolm E. Campbell to reproduce pho-
tographs from the book Memories of Goderich, and that granted by University of Toronto Press
to reproduce a map from the book Ontario’s History in Maps is gratefully acknowledged. This
paper was awarded the Max Crestohl Prize.
McGill Law Journal 1993
Revue de droit de McGill
To be cited as: (1993) 38 McGill L.J. 517
Mode de r6f6rence: (1993) 38 R.D. McGill 517
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
Synopsis
Introduction
Goderich Salt and Its Makers
I.
II. The Salt Boom: 1866-1870
III. The Salt Men of Goderich: Inventive, Creative and Highly
Competitive
IV. The American Competitor: The Vultures of Onondaga
V.
The Response of the Dominion: Reciprocity First
VI. The Response of the Locality: Cooperative Combination
VII. The Response of the Judiciary: The Courts Help Those Who Help
Themselves
Conclusion
Appendix
Introduction
Ontario Salt Co. v. Merchants Salt Co. is probably Canada’s leading case
on the common law of restraint of trade.’ But it generally is cited as a footnote
to the modem history of that law. And because Ontario Salt is a Canadian case,
most Anglo-American treatises on the subject do not include it at all.2 Ontario
Salt is included in Canadian texts which specifically treat restraint of trade law,
but only briefly, as though the authors and editors of those texts were trying to
meet a minimum Canadian content requirement.’ Little is known about the con-
‘(1871), 18 Gr. 540 (Ch. C.) [hereinafter Ontario Salt].
2See e.g. J. D. Heydon, The Restraint of Trade Doctrine (London: Butterworths, 1971); W. Let-
win, Law and Economic Policy in America: The Evolution of the Sherman Antitrust Act (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1965); NV. A. Sanderson, Restraint of Trade in English Law (London:
Sweet & Maxwell, 1926).
3Compare M. J. Trebilcock, The Common Law of Restraint of Trade (Toronto: Carswell, 1986);
B. Dunlop, D. McQueen & M.J. Trebilcock, Canadian Competition Policy: A Legal and Economic
Analysis (Toronto: Canada Law Book, 1987) at 31. R. J. Roberts, Anticombines andAnti-Trust. The
Competition Law of Canada and the Anti-Trust Law of the United States (Toronto: Butterworths,
1980) dealt only with legislation and did not treat Ontario Salt.
Ontario Salt is briefly discussed by Mark Chartrand in “The First Canadian Trade Union Leg-
islation: An Historical Perspective” (1984) 16 Ottawa L. Rev. 267.
Jamie Benedickson critically analyzed Ontario Salt in a forthcoming article, entitled “The Com-
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
text and circumstances of the case, largely because interest in it has rarely gone
beyond the purely doctrinal history that dominates law libraries.
In the text that follows, I take a different approach. I seek to examine the
case in its context.4 Placed in its context and presented with a fuller host of for-
ces that influenced it and its intended ends, the decision in Ontario Salt may
well rise from the footnotes to take a more important place in the history of
Canadian restraint of trade. At least, such is my hope.
In my opinion, the prime interest of the leading case in context lies in the
story itself,5 a story that enables us to compare and contrast the present day with
the Victorian Age. History is emphatically not past politics or past jurisprudence.
written with an eye to present purposes or currently popular causes. istory,
including legal history, is the telling of a story of change and of the conservative
forces that condition change. It is the “life of yesterday in the present.”6 Each
story therefore has value in itself and should be enjoyably told.
bines Problem in Canadian Legal Thought, 1867-1920,” a not-yet-completely revised version of
his LL.M. thesis. I am most grateful to him for granting me access to his thesis and for permission
to cite it.
4 As a detailed examination of a single case in its historical context, this paper belongs to a new
genre in legal history writing that has developed over the last twenty years. The corpus of that
genre consists of: R. Danzig, “Hadley v. Baxendale: A Study in the Industrialization of the Law”
(1975) 4 J. Legal Studies 249; A.W.B. Simpson, “Regina v. Archer and Muller (1875): The Lead-
ing Case that Never Was” (1982) 2 Oxford J. of Legal Studies 181; A.W.B. Simpson, Cannibalism
and the Common Law: The Story of the Tragic Last Voyage of the Mignonette and the Strange
Legal Proceedings to Which it Gave Rise (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984); A.W.B.
Simpson, “Legal Liability for Bursting Reservoirs: The Historical Context of Rylands v. Fletcher”
(1984) 13 J. Legal Studies 209; A.W.B. Simpson, “Quackery and Contract Law: The Case of the
Carbolic Smoke Ball” (1985) 14 J. Legal Studies 345; A.W.B. Simpson, “Contracts for Cotton to
Arrive: The Case of the Two Ships Peerless” (1989) 11 Cardozo L.R. 287; M.L. Friedland, The
Case of Valentine Shortis: A True Story of Crime and Politics in Canada (Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1986); R.W. Kostal, “Legal Justice, Social Justice: An Incursion into the Social His-
tory of Work-Related Accident Law in Ontario, 1860-86” (1988) 6 L. & Hist. Rev. 1.
5Compare the approaches of the authors cited ibid. For example, in “Legal Justice, Social Jus-
tice,” Rande Kostal sought to explore the interplay of legal and social forces, to apply Douglas
Hay’s notions of law from above (legal justice) and law from below (social justice), and to explore
the hegemonic control of a legal culture that imbricates itself in social life (compare D. Hay et al.,
Albion’s Fatal Tree: Crime and Society in Eighteenth Century England (London: Allen Lane,
1975)). He purposely chose a case (Mathews v. Hamilton Powder Company (1885), 12 O.R. 58
(Q.B.), rev’d (1887), 14 O.R. 261 (C.A.)) that put the two ir1 conflict, and which could be used
to prove the kinds of radical hypotheses that Robert Gordon discussed in “Critical Legal Histories”
((1984) 36 Stanford L. Rev. 57).
Brian Simpson and Richard Danzig began with a desire to understand the idea of leading cases.
Their scholarship attempted to explain the difference between what the “great” cases had come to
mean after having been processed by .doctrinaire legal scholars and used by generations of barris-
ters to score rhetorical points at trial, and what those cases meant to the parties involved in them.
By scrutinizing Rylands v. Fletcher, Simpson sought to explain the co-existence of antithetical
notions of liability (fault-based and strict) in mid-Victorian tort law. Although he was successful
in doing so, Simpson discovered several other things along the way. Not least of those other dis-”
coveries was the essential marginality of the common law as a regulator of mid-nineteenth-century
economic activity, what the Times of London called “the impotence of the law.”
6This phrase was taken from W.A. Mackintosh, “Economic Factors in Canadian History” in W.T.
Easterbrook & M.H. Watkins, eds., Approaches to Canadian Economic History: A Selection of
Essays (Ottawa: Carleton University Press, 1967) 1 at 2.
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[Vol. 38
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
It is in that spirit that the following account has been approached. It is the
story of a small town in a young nation, and of a new, rapidly successful indus-
try to which the people of that town looked as a source of great prosperity. The
primary source for the story was a local newspaper whose editorial columns and
leaders were full of a life, hope, and energy that readers of modem newspapers
no longer know. Much of that story will be told in the words and voices of the
actors themselves.
Beyond that, the story of the late-nineteenth-century salt industry in Gode-
rich, Ontario, is a compelling example of economic ordering by a new nation,
and of the compromising and deal-making that are the stuff of nation-building.
For the people of Goderich, salt was all there was, and their fortunes were made
or broken on the success of the town’s only industry. For the people of Canada
in the years immediately following Confederation, both salt and the people of
Goderich were bit players in a much larger drama, items of barter to be used in
establishing a national trade and tariff policy that was supposed to benefit all
Canadians, all regions, and all industries.
In the midst of that growth, hope and excitement was a legal dispute,
Ontario Salt. The Canadian Salt Association (“CSA”) was formed by several salt
manufacturers all of which agreed to combine in an attempt to stabilize the price-
of salt and to unite against an American competitor that benefitted from a pro-
tective U.S. tariff on imported Canadian salt. When several parties to that agree-
ment attempted to withdraw from the combination, the CSA sued in Ontario’s
Court of Chancery for an injunction which would restrain the defendants, Mer-
chants Salt Co. et al., from selling salt other than through CSA trustees. Vice-
Chancellor Samuel Henry Strong found for the plaintiffs for reasons that are dis-
cussed in detail below. Ontario Salt became Canada’s leading case on restraint
of trade. Had Ontario Salt’s occupancy of the pinnacle of Canadian restraint of
trade doctrine not been pre-empted by statutory regulation of the problems posed
by cartelization, it may have gained in notoriety.7 As things turned out, it was
cited in only three reported Canadian cases, all of which applied it.’
Ontario Salt could never really have become a leading Anglo-American
case for two reasons. First, it was a Canadian case in a time and place that
7One argument in favour of granting “leading case” status to Ontario Salt is the wording used
by Strong in affirming that the real object of the CSA was not “unduly to enhance the price, but
as it is expressly alleged in the bill, to 6nable the parties by concerted action to combat an attempt
on the part of foreign producers and manufacturers unduly to depreciate it” (Ontario Salt, supra
note 1 at 543). His use of the term “unduly” was similar to that which was ultimately codified in
An Act for the Prevention and Suppression of Combinations Formed in Restraint of Trade, S.C.
1889, c. 41, which prohibited all combination “to unduly limit…” or “to unduly prevent …” Note
that Strong was not responsible for the split infinitives in the Act.
8Schrader v. Lillis (1886), 10 O.R. 358 (Ch. C.); McCausland v. Hill (1896), 23 O.A.R. 739;
R. v. Beckett (1910), 20 O.L.R. 401 (K.B.). Ironically, Ontario Salt did take on more doctrinal
importance in the United States. In A.J. Eddy, The Law of Combinations: Embracing Monopolies,
Trusts, and Combinations of Labor and Capital, Conspiracy, and Contracts in Restraint of Trade
(Chicago: Callaghan & Co., 1901), Ontario Salt was cited repeatedly in support of developing
American legal dogma on restraint of trade law, notably in Skrainka v. Scharringhausen, 8 Mo.
App. 522 (1880); Nester v. Continental Brewing Co., 2 Dist. R. 177, on appeal 29 A. 102 (Pa. S.C.
1894); U.S. v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n, which is discussed further infra, note 121.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
looked to England for its legal authority.9 Second, the judge in Ontario Salt, Sir
Samuel Henry Strong, Vice-Chancellor, broke the rules required to make a case
a leading case. Rather than assist in the careful exposition of the finite set of
legal principles that constituted the deep and rational structure for the law,
Strong Canadianized the law by writing a contradictory judgment.’0 One part of
his judgment was an apparently dogmatic exposition of English doctrine; the
other was an appeal to public and scientific opinion in an adaptation of the law
to the needs of the litigants as participants in an experiment in nation-building.
I. Goderich Salt and Its Makers
Goderich, Ontario, was founded in 1827 by two intrepid Scotsmen, John
Galt and William Dunlop.” In 1867, Goderich, population 3,500, was both the
centre of a remote agricultural community and a desirable summer resort, the
latter due to the “salubrious atmosphere” of its Lake Huron shoreline.’ It was
perfectly suited to prosperous trade. The Buffalo and Lake Huron Branch of the
Grand Trunk Railroad from Fort Erie to Goderich (161 miles in length, com-
pleted in 1858) terminated at the harbour of Goderich and intersected with the
main line at Stratford, communicating with the major railroad systems of Can-
ada and the United States. The harbour accommodations for shipping freight by
water to the principal points on the Great Lakes were “all that [could] be
desired.”‘ 3 Grain from Chicago was trans-shipped through Goderich to the rest
of Canada. Prior to the salt boom that turned it into a thriving industrial town,
however, “Goderich presented but little interest beyond the mere fact of being
a healthy and pleasant Lake shore town … [which] served as a convenient place
of transit from Canada to the Michigan and Upper Lake Ports.”‘ 4
From a contemporary observer’s perspective, Goderich may have been
pleasant, but living conditions there were far from utopic. The editors of Mem-
ories of Goderich described it as follows:
There were no sewers. The streets were rough. After a rain some were nearly
impassable while in dry weather the dust was so thick that one could scarcely see
across the Square or West Street where the traffic was heavy. Water was got from
surface wells or springs. Some people had to carry their water a half mile. Back
yards were filthy. Typhoid was still common. A bell ringer proclaimed the time,
sometimes not altogether accurately. Street lights were oil lamps which had to be
lit each night. There were no sidewalks … Successive editors waged war on the
cows, pigs, geese and horses that roamed the streets and at night, in the poor light,
presented a real hazard. They did not approve of Courthouse Park as a cow pas-
9See generally G.B. Baker, “The Reconstitution of Upper Canadian Legal Thought in the Late-
Victorian Empire” (1985) 3 L. & Hist. Rev. 219.
‘Compare C.C. Langdell, A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown,
1871), or C.C. Langdell, A Summary of the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1880).
ada, 2d ed. (Goderich: n.p., 1979) at 5 [hereinafter Memories of Goderich].
ISee generally D. Wallace, Memories of Goderich: The Romance of the Prettiest Town in Can-
12C.A. Goessman, Report on the Salt Resources of Goderich, Province of Ontario [Canada
West] (Syracuse, N.Y.: Onondaga Salt Co., 1868) at 3.
Proceedings of the Engineers’ Club of Philadelphia 1 at 1.
‘ 3J.H. Harden, “Rock-Salt Deposits of Huron and Bruce Counties, Ontario, Canada” (1879) 1:3
‘4Goessman, supra note 12 at 4.
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
ture, either. The streets were only clean, they said, on the rare occasions when the
cows were in the pound. 15
Yet Goderich of the 1870s had come a long way since its founding a mere forty
years earlier. In 1879, the Historical Atlas of Huron County, Ontario depicted
the history of Goderich and its surrounding area in the following slightly florid
manner:
It is still within the memory of men of but middle age, when nought but nature’s
solitudes echoed back the scream of the eagle and the yelping of the wolf … How
many can remember when, for miles on all sides of the county town, then the chef
lieu of the whole “Huron Tract,” scarce a human habitation existed, nor had a
white man taken up his abode in what was then the undisputed hunting grounds
of the aborigines … Many bear living witness to changes which have occurred
under their own eyes within a generation –
changes so vast as to rival fiction in
their wonderful reality; who have seen large towns arise from the forest and a wide
expanse of trackless wilds give place to wealthy and populous communities …
who have seen the miseries and sufferings incident to the early settlement of a wil-
derness replaced by comfort, plenty and affluence, and the embryo settlements
grow broader and more broad under the blow of the woodman’s axe, till now in
many parts but an occasional grove of native forest dots here and there a landscape
embracing far-stretching areas of waving corn and luxuriant meadow, instead of
an almost unbroken wilderness, interspersed at no oft-recurring intervals with
small patches of stump-covered clearing surrounding primitive log huts. 16
The source of Goderich’s substantial progress was the salt boom. In 1866,
when oil excitement was at its height in Canada.West, a company was formed
at Goderich with the goal of “striking ile.” In May of that year, Samuel Platt –
a “wonder of go-aheadiveness” and a man of “invincible character” – was
drilling for oil. He had persuaded some Goderich businessmen to invest $10,000
in the Goderich Petroleum Company. Platt hired Peter MacEwan, who had suc-
cessfully drilled several oil wells in nearby Lambton County, as chief driller. At
686 feet, Platt’s company was out of money, and his investors abandoned the
project.” Fortunately for Platt, oil fever had spread to the local municipal coun-
cils, which offered up to $1,500 to anyone who drilled to 1000 feet. He contin-
ued drilling and was successful.” Instead of finding black gold, Platt lucked into
one of the world’s richest deposits of white gold: its purest salt. Within a few
months, the Goderich Salt and Petroleum Company became the Goderich Salt
Company, achieving immediate success in the manufacture of boiled salt. 9
15Memories of Goderich, supra note 11 at 74.
16H. Belden & Co., Illustrated Historical Atlas of Huron County, Ontario (Owen Sound, Ont.:
Richardson, Bond & Wright, 1972) at 7 [hereinafter Historical Atlas].
7Memories of Goderich, supra note 11 at 50.
‘SAt 964 feet, Platt “encountered a solid bed of rock salt into which he bored for a distance of
60 feet, thus completing 1,000 feet, and securing” the bonuses. See L.H. Cole, The Salt Industry
of Canada (Ottawa: Dept. of Mines, 1930) at 32.
19The capital of the newly incorporated Goderich Petroleum Company (later called the Goderich
Salt Company), which began producing salt in September of 1866, was increased to $14,000. It
paid a one-half year dividend of 25-35% in its first year of operation: (“Dividend” Signal (14 Jan-
uary 1868) 2). Goessman said:
Six months after the works commenced operations, a dividend of 15 per cent was paid
to the stockholders; and at the end of the year a further dividend was declared of 36
per cent, making a clear profit of 50 per cent for the first year in spite of many inci-
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
Platt’s company was so successful that American salt manufacturers, who
had previously controlled the Canada West market, soon arrived to investigate
the competitive threat posed by Goderich salt. The Onondaga Salt Company,
which enjoyed a monopoly on the production, sale, and distribution of salt in
New York State, sent C.A. Goessman, a chemist and geologist, to Goderich as
the first stage in formulating a plan to maintain its competitive edge in the salt
industry. Regarding the salt deposits, Goessman concluded:
Firstly, the present brine of Goderich is not only one of the most concentrated
known, but also one of the purest, if not the purest, at present turned to practical
use for the manufacture of Salt.
Secondly. That the salt bearing region apparently extends for more than twelve
miles S.E. of Goderich and thus covers a much larger area than at present has been
established.2″
Thirdly. That Goderich possesses, in a high degree, all necessary additional
resources and facilities for the manufacture of salt, and its transportation to all the
important commercial points on the Western Lakes, and is therefore the most for-
midable competitor the Salt works of the State of New York have ever yet had to
contend with. [emphasis added]2′
Goessman’s analysis, verified on three later occasions, showed that Goderich
salt was fifty per cent more concentrated than New York salt and contained only
one-fifth the impurities.’ The superior purity and strength, and consequent
commercial value, of Goderich salt bestowed on the region a huge competitive
advantage. Based on that advantage, Goderich quickly became the salt capital
of the new Dominion of Canada.
Factual, rational and informative, Goessman’s reports explained what was
at stake economically, but they did not even hint at what was really at stake for
the people of Goderich, of Ontario, and of the newly-created Dominion. The
local newspaper, the Signal, was full of the “eureka” flavour of salt:24
dental expenses arising from a first attempt at starting an entirely new business (supra
note 12 at 11).
201n 1930, L.H. Cole, supra note 18 at 26, estimated the area of the salt basin to be approximately
3,000 square miles. He remarked that a bed one foot in thickness over such an area could produce
6,000,000,000 tons of pure salt. Ontario’s salt beds vary in thickness from 100 to 200 feet. “It can
thus be seen that there is little danger of the supply of salt in Ontario being exhausted.”
21Goessman, supra note 12 at 5-6.
22Compare T.S. Hunt, “Report on the Goderich Salt Region” in General Report of the Geolog-
ical Survey of Canada for 1867-69 (Montreal: Dawson Bros., 1870) 26. Professor John Gibson,
of the Ottawa Normal School, reconfirmed both Goessman’s and Hunt’s results in a study under-
taken in 1876. His results were published as part of the “Report of the Select Committee Appointed
to Enquire into the Salt Interests” Journals of the House of Commons, 1876, Vol. 10, Appendix
(No. 2) at 6 [hereinafter “Select Committee”].
23Goessman, supra note 12 at 7.
24The Huron Signal, also known as the Goderich Signal, was published in two versions. There
was a weekly and a semi-weekly edition. It is available from 1867 to 1873 on micro-film. Because
many of the papers were missing, tom or burned, the editors of the micro-film used the best avail-
able copies of either the weekly or the semi-weekly in a valiant attempt to cobble together some-
thing approaching a chronological history of Goderich and the surrounding counties. The McLen-
nan Library at McGill University has the paper from 1867 to 1873. Most of the issues in 1867 and
1868 appear to be preserved. The worst year is 1869. For that year, no issues are available from
31 December 1868 to 25 May 1869. May 25 is preserved, but then there is nothing until 25 June.
A few issues from the summer of 1869 are preserved, but nothing after 2 September is available.
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
GODERICH SALT FEVER
It appears that the fame of our Goderich Salt has spread to the far-off shores of
the Pacific. Under the above heading, the British Columbian gives an article which
is copied below. What a wonderful engine is the Press for the widespread dissem-
ination of news. The tidings of our great discovery of salt, published in the Signal,
have been read in nearly every county of the British Isles, amongst the glaciers of
Switzerland, in plodding Bavaria, distant India, Australia, California, British
Columbia, &c., as well as in all parts of Canada. There is a moral in this which
advertisers should study –
not that they will obtain customers from distant parts
–
but that the newspaper is the key to popularity at home. The British Columbian
says: –
It would appear that salt, no less than gold, produces fever. We find
from our Canadian exchanges that the salt fever was raging at Gode-
rich. It is already known that several salt wells have been in successful
operation at that town for more than a year, producing salt of a very
good quality, so good, indeed, as to have carried the prize against the
world at the late Paris Exposition. A well had recently been sunk in the
The film begins again on 6 January 1870. Most of the issues from 1870 and 1871 are preserved.
The first 5 months of 1872 are well preserved, but all the issues from June to December, 1872,
are missing. There are no major missing periods in 1873.
It will be referred to here as the Signal. Its editor was one Cox, about whom I have been able
to discover very little. Both he and his newspaper were decidedly Liberal and free trade in their
outlook, but the Signal could not fairly be considered a party organ. Though rarely impartial, Cox’s
editorials were balanced. He did not follow the party line in a knee-jerk, unreflective manner.
On the use of local newspapers as sources, see generally P. Rutherford, A Victorian Authority:
The Daily Press in Late Nineteenth-Century Canada (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1982).
Local dailies, semi-weeklies, and weeklies of the nineteenth century did not pursue any ideal of
objectivity. Rather, the late-nineteenth-century newspaper was a mechanism of bourgeois liberty.
The Signal, with its utilitarian motto (‘The Greatest Possible Good to the Greatest Possible
Number”), was no different. Its bias was not ideological so much as it was practical and necessary.
For what was occurring in post-Confederation Canada went beyond theory and ideology. It was
nation-building.
The Signal, like other local papers of its time, had an important role to play in that process. A
popular press that could supply information and fashion myths for a mass audience was essential
to the integration of a transcontinental community. Beyond that general mission, however, the pop-
ular press was far from monolithic. Idiosyncrasy was the rule; editors tried to stamp their papers
with a feel and flavour that would sustain readership and retain advertisers. To satisfy advertisers,
newspapers served their ends. To succeed in that project, a paper had to sway public opinion (Ruth-
erford, ibid at 118, 130). In practice, the dailies often became social authorities working on behalf
of harmony and consensus. In its desire to promote the industrialization of Goderich and the suc-
cess of the salt men, for example, the Signal sought to persuade farmers that higher prices for salt
were in their best interests.
It is important to remember that local papers were not voices of truth, nor did they merely
express the needs and desires of their readers. They were as much agents of social change and
moulders of opinion as voices of it. In the early years of Confederation, editorials
elaborated a series of mythologies of nationhood which sometimes challenged but usu-
ally justified the existing or emerging patterns of dominance in the country at large.
[Riough-hewn and incorporating unresolved tensions and outright contradictions,
[the mythmakers pursued] three apparent certitudes, the ideas of progress, nationality,
and democracy (Rutherford, ibid at 156-57).
Progress and nationality were the basis for almost everything said in the Signal regarding the Cana-
dian Salt Association. That being the case, there is no way to know what was real public perception
and what was the editor pursuing dreams and spinning tales of national dreams. From the Signal,
then, comes context, but context of a particular variety, subject to scepticism.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
neighborhood of the railway station, near Monroe’s tavern, the chief
object of which was to test th [sic] breadth of the saline deposit. The
experiment has been most successful. Thirty-three feet of salt had been
pierced, ten feet of which was one solid mass of pure salt, of the very
best quality! The Huron Signal, the leading Goderich paper, concludes
that the entire townsite and far beyond it, forms one enormous basin
filled with salt, which generations will not exhaust, and estimates the
deposit to be of more importance to that place than either silver or gold
mines. We heartily congratulate Goderich upon its good fortune. It has
long been the prettiest town in Canada, at least so far as natural attrac-
tions are concerned; and it now bids fair to be the wealthiest. Verily,
Canada would appear to have a bright destiny before it. Scarcely a year
passes without making the discovery of some new source of untold
wealth. First copper, then coal-oil, silver, gold followed in quick suc-
cession, and now salt is added to the list.
H. The Salt Boom: 1866-1870
For ten or fifteen years following Confederation, the prosperity of Gode-
rich was inextricably linked to the production of salt. The competitiveness of
Goderich salt depended on the method of production used and on its adaptation
to the conditions of production in that town. The immediate success of the first
wells in Goderich led people to put great faith in the salt men, whose works ben-
efitted the community not only with inexpensive salt of high quality, but also
with hopes of endless competitive production and enormous long-term success.
By the time Ontario Salt was heard in 1871, there were nine salt manufac-
tories in Goderich and probably a dozen more in the region.26 Because no one
undertook a full study of the overall effect of that industry on Goderich, the ben-
efits of the salt industry are difficult to measure. Viewers have only an impres-
sionistic picture of those advantages which can be gleaned from the pages of the
Signal. Yet with the prosperity of the salt boom there came undeniable local
benefits, particularly in public infrastructure. Roads were graded and gravelled,
sidewalks and boardwalks were constructed, and more permanent lighting was
installed. Culverts were installed so that waste water could be easily discharged
‘Signal (19 March 1868) 2.
26Salt was manufactured by an evaporation technique. Each well was between 900 and 1200 feet
deep. Pumps moved 500 barrels of brine per day into large vats connected to blocks of salt kettles.
The original works of the Goderich Salt Company comprised 104 kettles, each of 140 gallons’
capacity and 4 6 feet wide, lined up in four rows. Built of brick, the salt block for the kettles was
120 feet long and 64 feet wide. Under each row ran one long furnace that burned 4 cords of wood
per day. With the furnaces at full blast, the evaporation process took about four hours –
the faster
it boiled the finer was the salt produced (Goessman, supra note 12; Hunt, supra note 22; M.S. Bee-
croft, Windings: A History of the Lower Maitland River (Goderich: Maitland Valley Conservation
Authority, 1984) at 68). As salt was deposited, it was put in bins to dry, then barrelled for market.
The original Goderich works produced between 90 and 100 barrels per day, and each barrel con-
tained 300 pounds of salt. The capital investment required for the establishment of a salt manu-
factory ranged from $10,000 to $20,000 (see “The Salt Wells of Goderich” Signal (29 October
1868) 2).
There was a variety of grades of salt. Some was kept for table use, some was prepared for butter
and dairy use. Chemicals were added to keep it free-running. This better-quality salt was sold in
cotton bags, in 2, 3, 5, 8 and 19 pound lots. The bags were filled by girls and put into barrels for
shipment (Beecroft, ibid. at 69).
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
into the river and drinking water was kept clean. In the centre of town an old
cemetery was converted into a large park and commons, where fairs and com-
munity celebrations were held. The salt boom had a real and positive effect on
the quality of life in Goderich, which in turn created ample public support for
the industry. That a few traces of pre-boom Goderich persisted could be seen in
the cattle that continued to roam its streets. Thanks to the sidewalks, it could at
least be claimed that the people of Goderich no longer had to step in the hazards
created by those cattle. 7
That there was a good deal of local public support for what the salt men
were doing in Goderich is also shown by the existence of certain risk-reducing
incentives created by the elected local councils. In 1868, the Huron County
Council offered a bonus of $2,000 to companies or individuals who drilled wells
reaching depths of 1,000 feet.28 The Goderich Town Council exempted all salt
wells from municipal and property taxes for five years.29 The development of
the industry was not, therefore, an entirely private affair, but a mixed enterprise
involving the entire community. Everyone invested in it, directly.through the
local councils, and indirectly. by paying a higher price than might have been fair
under pure market conditions. “Buy Canadian, Buy Goderich!” was a call often
read in the columns of the Signal. There were dissenters, of course, who refused
to share in the industry. Their views did not often appear in the pages of the Sig-
nal, but when they did, they were revealing.
The following editorial demonstrates better than most just how much
Goderich benefitted from the development of the salt industry. The Canadian
Salt Association, the cartel vindicated in the Ontario Salt case, was formed on
29 June 1871. It immediately raised the price of salt by twenty-five per cent.3″
Inevitably, some local farmers grumbled. The Signal responded to their com-
plaints with the following editorial:
A WORD ABOUT THE SALT AMALGAMATION31
Supposing they [the farmers] have to pay $1.60 per barrel for salt, the difference
on the largest quantity used by any farmer in a year will not be appreciable. On
the other hand, if the old price had continued and this amalgamation had not been
accomplished, how would it have affected the entire community if (as would have
been inevitable) the majority of the wells should have been shut up? Where would
have been the extensive market for cordwood, which has been the mainstay of our
agricultural neighbours during several years of poor crops? 32 Where would have
27See Memories of Goderich, supra note 11 at 74.
28See Signal (4 June 1868).
29Apparently, the nearby Village of Seaforth decided not to do so. On discovering this failure,
the Signal exhorted people to drill nonetheless: “This should not deter parties intending to bore,
for, no doubt, if at the end of the year a well should be found paying no dividend, the Council
would follow the example of Goderich and omit the taxes” (“Sale at Seaforth” Signal (21 July
1870) 2).
3 00n the Toronto market, the price changed from $1.20-$1.25 per carload on 29 June 1871 to
$1.50-$1.60 per barrel on 6 July 1871 (“Weekly Review of Toronto Markets” The [Toronto] Daily
Globe (29 June 1871) 4, (6 July 1871) 4). Changes in the price of salt are documented in the
Appendix.
31Signal (7 July 1871) 2.
32To grow agricultural crops, farmers had to remove the extensive Ontario forest. In other
regions, trees were either dangerously burned or cut and left to rot. Around Goderich, the farmers
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
been the market for stave timber, hoops, &c., out of which not a little ready money
was turned, when that agreeable medium exchange could not otherwise have been
procured? 33 Where would have been the occupation 34 of the host of coopers, 35
teamsters, laborers and others whose families’ wants created such excellent mar-
kets for farm products, that otherwise would have gone away from home at lower
prices? We are sure that every reasonable man will acknowledge that the principal
source of our prosperity and advancement3 6 in this sector would have dried up
with the decay of the salt manufacture. We should therefore be only too glad to
assist the salt manufacturers, in carrying out an arrangement, which, on its present
reasonable basis, will yield them a fair profit and guarantee to the community a
continued and increasing flow of business, population and improvements.37 [ref-
erences and notes supplied]
The effect of such editorial promotion cannot be measured, but such reasoning
must have been persuasive in a time of rapid growth. The inhabitants of Gode-
rich obviously appreciated how quickly the quality of their daily lives had been
improving, and the Signal was probably effective in convincing them that a
$1.50 per day (Signal (29 October 1869)).
could sell the wood they cut for $2-$2.50 per cord. Thus, they earned extra cash, had larger farms
and employed their horses during the off season. In June, 1868, 26,189 (50%) of Goderich Town-
ship’s 52,378 acres were cleared (“Report of the Equalization Committee” Signal (11 June 1868)
1). In June, 1870,53% (27,454/51,800 acres) were cleared (Signal (16 June 1870)). One yearlater,
the amount of cleared land increased to 54% (27,972/51,800 acres) (Signal (15 June 1871)).
Exactly what these statistics represent is not clear, they are presented as a possible indication of
what occurred.
33Goderich salt was packed in barrels. In the industry’s first years, those barrels were imported
from London, Ontario. On 10 November 1870, the Signal reported the establishment of a spin-off
enterprise: Standby & Co.’s sawmill hoop, stave, and heading factory. There was only one other
mill like it elsewhere in the Dominion. It employed 60 to 100 workers, depending on the season,
paying the men $1.10-$1.20 per day and the boys 50-60 cents per day. It purchased timber worth
$10,000 in 1870 and estimated that it would purchase twice that amount in 1871. On a daily basis,
it consumed over 20,000 feet of lumber, while producing 16,000-20,000 staves, 15,000-20,000
hoops, and 2000 barrel headings (“Extensive Enterprise” Signal (10 November 1870) 2).
34Each manufactory employed between 14 and 20 men who were paid between 75 cents and
35Coopers made barrels. The only sign of labour strife during the period in issue involved coop-
ers. One day, 30 of them marched down West Street –
“The Fenians come at last!,” exclaimed
our reporter. They wanted, and received the next day, an advance of 1 cent on each square headed
barrel and two cents on roundheads. The Signal did not approve, being “entirely opposed [to]
strikes” (“Coopers’ Strike” Signal (30 June 1870) 2).
36The average selling price throughout the period 1868 to 1872 in Goderich harbour was $1.20
per barrel (the prices shown in the Appendix were in the Toronto market and include transportation
costs from Goderich to Toronto), while the average cost of production was about $1. In 1869,
60,566 barrels were shipped from Goderich alone, bringing some $72,000 into the town. The
amount of salt sold increased steadily. From September 1872 to September 1873, 130,000 barrels
of salt were shipped, by water, to the U.S. alone (“Local News” Signal (19 November 1873) 2).
This figure does not include the amount shipped either by rail to U.S. or Canadian destinations,
or by water to Canadian destinations. Assuming that the ratio of shipments by rail to shipments
by water remained the same, a possible indication of the total sales for 1873 can be derived using
the 1869 figures. Of the 60,566 barrels shipped in that year, only 14,856 (24%) were shipped by
water. Were this still the case in 1873, it would mean that about 542,000 barrels of salt were sold
by Goderich alone. If in any way accurate, this would represent an increase of over 850% in 5
years.37The population of Huron County was 685 in 1833. By 1871, it had increased to 66,165.
According to the 1871 census, the population of Goderich was 3,954. Clinton had 2,016, and Sea-
forth had 1,386. The Signal reported that the population of Goderich increased by over 400 people
in the 5 years following the discovery of salt (Signal (15 June 1871)).
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
slightly greater contribution on their part would further enhance that quality of
life. So tremendous had the increase in the number of salt works in Goderich
been since the discovery of salt that the town’s inhabitants could not have mis-
taken the centrality of the salt industry as a cause of the improvement in their
lives. Perhaps the Signal was successful in persuading its readers that the far-
mers’ grumbling was unwarranted.
In 1867, there was only one producing salt well in the region of Goderich, that
of Samuel Platt. By 1872, the year following the Ontario Salt case, there were
twelve in Goderich alone.3″ Platt himself drilled another well in 1868. A year
later, Peter MacEwan, Platt’s former driller, set up his own company, the Inter-
national Salt Works. The International became the largest producing well in
Goderich and continued in operation longer than the others. MacEwan also ran
the salt operation set up by Ogilvie and Hutchinson at the Big Mill, a flour mill
near Goderich Harbour.39 In that same four-year period, salt had also been dis-
covered in the nearby towns of Clinton, Kincardine, and Seaforth’ The total
number of salt-producing wells in the entire region is uncertain, but there were
at least eighteen and perhaps as many as twenty-four. All but two of those wells,
the Clinton Works and a Goderich well, were financed with local capital. Only
two of the owners were not locals.
I. The Salt Men of Goderich: Inventive, Creative and Highly
Competitive
In 1868, C. A. Goessman concluded that Goderich, possessiilg abundant
salt of the highest purity, was the most formidable competitor with whom the
salt producers of New York had yet had to contend.4′ It appears odd that the
makers of an inherently competitive product required, or thought they required,
a cartel to survive. The explanation for their belief is three-fold. First, Goderich
38In 1872, the following salt works existed (the number in parentheses indicates the well’s
capacity): “The Goderich” (200 bbl/day, 30 tons), “Maitland” (100 bbl/day, 15 tons), “Prince” (100
bbl/day, 15 tons), “Victoria” (150 bbl/day, 22.5 tons), “Huron” (100 bbl/day, 15 tons), “Dominion”
(200 bbl/day, 30 tons), “Tecumseh” (100 bbl/day, 15 tons), “Hawley’s” (200 bbl/day, 30 tons),
“Inniskillen” (200 bbl/day, 30 tons), MacEwan’s “International” (600 bbl/day, 90 tons), “Platt’s”
(150 bbl/day, 22.5 tons) –
the pioneer’s third well, drilled after he severed his connection with
the Goderich Petroleum Company in 1872, and the “Ontario” (150 bbl/day, 22.5 tons), which was
owned and operated by the Ontario Salt Company. Though full production would have been
extraordinarily rare in 1872, Goderich had the capacity to produce 2,250 barrels (337.5 tons) of
salt per day. See Cole, supra note 18 at 33.
39MacEwan operated the International until his death in 1904. See A. Lobb, ed., The Township
of Goderich History (Goderich: The Corporation of the Township of Goderich, 1984) at 197-98.
4on late 1870, the defendant in Ontario Salt, the Merchants Salt Co., began its operations in Sea-
forth with a capacity of 250 barrels per day. Merchants shut down its works in the 1880s, making
it the shortest lived of Ontario’s major salt companies. Merchants was preceded in 1870 by the Sea-
forth Salt Works which, in 1873 and 1876, was expanded to a capacity of 500 barrels per day. It
was followed by the Eclipse salt works after the demise of the CSA with a capacity of 300 barrels
a day. Several smaller blocks were established in Seaforth during that period, but the brine for those
blocks was supplied by Eclipse or Merchants. The main Clinton works were founded in 1867 by
the enterprising Englishman, Henry Ransford. The Kincardine works were not complete until
1871, and its owners were not part of the Ontario Salt litigation.
41See supra note 12 at 7.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
Platt’s second salt well, one of ten in operation in the Maitland valley which produced a total of 1,300
barrels a day during the peak year in 1872.
Picture above shows salt works just east of the former Maitland Bridge bought by Peter MacEwan from
Samuel Platt’s Goderich Petroleum Company and operated by him until his death in 1904. The flag is
flying above the original well. The buildings to the left are the cooperage.
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
531
The Salt Block at the foot of harbour hill, owned by Ogilvie & Hutchison of the Big Mill and operated
by Peter MacEwan. Picture suggests the enormous quantity of wood needed to heat the evaporating
pans. The high price of fuel forced the closing of several mills.
Wooden Bridge over Maitland was replaced in 1880 by this iron one which remained until 1962. Note
cattle coming off the bridge, the MacEwan Salt Works and, to the left, the Maitland Hotel.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
salt was too pure. Second, American salt was produced by a monopoly that
maintained its market share thanks, in large part, to a substantial protective tar-
iff. Third, late-nineteenth-century Canadian businessmen were developing a
world view that permitted them to live what, to a purist, would be a contradic-
tion: they honestly believed and faithfully propounded a wholly liberal ideology
that could be derogated from, exceptionally, in the interests of the nation’s
development.
Goderich salt may have been purer than American salt, but it could not be
produced at competitive prices without specially-adapted technology. During
the Canadian industry’s early stages, the only available evaporation technology
was one developed by Americans. In adopting the American kettle system,
Canadians unknowingly embraced a method of production that turned the purity
of their salt into a disadvantage. Because Goderich salt was fifty per cent purer
than Syracuse salt, that region’s salt works ought to have produced fifty percent
more salt per cord of wood consumed. Instead, the Goderich Salt Company pro-
duced less salt per cord than did the Onondaga Salt Company.42 The problem
was simple. The system of evaporation used in Syracuse was ill-suited for the
strong brines of the Goderich region. Being extremely concentrated, Goderich
salt separated into very fine grains which formed a hard encrustation on the ket-
tles, several inches thick.43 Not only did this waste salt, since the encrusted ver-
sion was not marketable except as manure (sold at $2 per ton), but it also
resulted in uneconomical fuel use (slower evaporation) and inefficient operation
(removal of the crust kept one row of kettles out of operation).”
Though such a technological problem might have been a reason to form a
cartel for unenterprising capitalists, it appears that the Canadian Salt Associa-
tion was -not formed to circumvent productive deficiencies. According to the
Signal, before the formation of the association, the Goderich salt men responded
to the challenge posed by this technological disadvantage with the same alacrity
that animated the drilling of salt wells. They put on their inventor’s caps and
changed the world of salt-making.
The man who discovered Goderich salt, Samuel Platt, was also the first to
improve its production.
PLAIT’S EVAPORATER. A GREAT SUCCESS!!
Having this morning inspected Platt’s New Evaporater … we have no hesitation in
expressing our firm belief that it will prove a grand success – will, in fact com-
pletely revolutionize the manufacture of salt in this town, to the advantage of our
local capitalists and the destruction of the interests of the Syracuse monopoly in
Ontario, if not in the Western States.
421n 1868, the Goderich Salt Co. produced a mere 36 bushels of salt for every cord of wood con-
sumed, while the Onondaga Salt Co. produced 37 to 38 bushels per cord. Hunt believed that Platt’s
works should have been able to produce 52 bushels per cord. See Hunt, supra note 22 at 16.
43The Goderich wells pumped a brine of extremely high gravity, averaging from 81 to 105
degrees in strength, as measured by the salometer. A gravity of 100 degrees is optimal; above that
level, the salt does not dissolve, but precipitates. The Goderich brines attained this level only if
the pumps had been inactive before testing (Hunt, ibid. at 13-14; see further Gibson, supra note
22 at 6-8).
44Goessman, supra note 12 at 10-12.
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
The principle of the new machine is simply that the evaporation is carried on in
a large shallow pan by the action of super-heated steam 4
? By this means the heat
evolved in the furnace is all saved; so that one cord of wood will do two and a half
times the amount of work, as compared with the kettle system. Again, the neces-
sary labor required in producing salt is reduced by more than one half. Hence, it
is obvious that by this new system salt can and will be manufactured at the rate
of, say, 55 cts per bbl. “f.o.b” whereas by the kettle system from 90c. to $1.00 is
the very lowest ratio. The new plan [pan?], we have not the least doubt, will be
adopted by all our manufacturers. It will enable them now to compete with the
Onondaga people in all parts of Canada, West of Kingston, and even to pay 70 cts
duty in gold in order to introduce it into the Chicago market. Of course, Syracuse
influence may be sufficiently strong to induce the federal authorities to place a still
higher duty on Canadian salt, but in that case we doubt not our government would
do a little at the game of tit for tat which would set matters all right.
Our salt stands, at present, first in the markets of Ontario, our wells are tested to
the utmost to supply the demand, and, as we have always believed, there is-for
Goderich, after the present hard times shall have blown over, a future replete with
material prosperity.9
6
Platt’s evaporator proved a great success and was adopted at many of the local
salt works. Professor Hunt visited Goderich to inspect the new evaporation sys-
tem and was tremendously impressed. 47 He spoke of a new fear at the Onondaga
Salt Company that the evaporator would permit Goderich to steal its markets,
despite the tariff. He encouraged the entire town to rally around the salt makers
and suggested that the railway give up land beside its tracks so that the long
evaporators could be installed.48 By September, a man named Runciman49 had
built a local foundry in which the new pans were fabricated, further enhancing
the prosperity of the town by reducing its dependence on imported capital
equipment. Seven of the new pans were built and installed during the autumn
of 1870.
The Signal attested to a flurry of inventive activity during 1869, and often
reported on new ideas.5″ In January of 1870, Gilbert McMicken, one of Platt’s
competitors, patented. a new method for speedy crystallization or precipitation
45The original double-bottomed pans were 8 feet long and 20 feet wide. Later, the salt works
utilized pans that were 100 feet long and 22 feet wide. These pans had sloping sides, and long rakes
were used to draw the salt up to drying platforms. Four furnaces, which operated 24 hours per day,
were mounted at the front of each pan. One cord of wood was consumed every hour. See Beecroft,
supra note 26 at 68-69.
46Signal (20 July 1869) 2.
47Hunt wrote his.report as a member of the Geological Survey of Canada. In January, 1872, on
learning that Hunt was leaving Canada to teach at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the
Signal opined the loss of Canada’s great minds: “The unfathomed riches concealed in [the Domi-
nion’s] rocks will far more than repay any efforts made to retain in our midst those whose learning
and skill are necessary to their economic discovery and use” (9 January 1872).
48Signal (19 November 1869).
49Runciman’s company was responsible for the erection of the buildings belonging to the
Ontario Salt Company. Runciman himself was a member of the Board of the Goderich Salt Com-
pany and was one of the original investors in that company.
50″The necessity for a cheap practical system of making salt here has called forth the full inven-
tive genius of our best mechanics. Several are now being tested and others are to be tried, but we
are not in a ppsition yet to give the results” (“Inventions” Signal (2 September 1869)). All but 10
of the 1869 issues of the paper are missing during this crucial period of development, so a full
appreciation of what was accomplished cannot be had.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
of salt.5 On January 27, 1870, the Signal printed the following, somewhat cryp-
tic report:
We understand that Mr. B. Seymour, has sent to Ottawa application for a Patent,
for a new apparatus for the manufacture of Salt in vacuo; one of the principles
being that the withdrawal of the atmosphere causes the brine to boil at 120
degrees, instead of at 226 degrees as in the ordinary kettle system, and nearly all
the caloric is saved by the vapor as it rises repassing through the condensing tubes,
and giving out its heat regeneratively. This plan is the discovery of Mr. Joseph Kil-
ley, the talented Engineer of the Prince Alfred. All the scientific men who have
examined the drawings and had the working explained to them, express the high-
est confidence in its success.
A few months later, Dr. McLean, who became a trustee of the cartel, patented
a new method for steam removal, a change that improved worker comfort and
productivity.52
In the spring of 1871, Messrs. Le Touzel and Nicholls, who owned and
operated the new Caesarea Salt Works, invented an innovative evaporator.53 Its
superiority over the Platt Evaporator may have played a role in both the emer-
gence and the eventual collapse of the salt cartel. It could make more salt with
a given quantity of fuel than any other pan of its size in Goderich. The Caesarea
Evaporator may, therefore, have been partially responsible for the continued
drop in the price of salt, which spurred the formation of the Canadian Salt Asso-
ciation. Because the Caesarea Salt Works did not join the cartel, the salt com-
bination probably faced competitive difficulties from the beginning. Several
companies that did join the cartel adopted this new method, however, mitigating
the short-term competitive damage done by Caesarea.54 Not to be outdone, Ben-
jamin Buchart, of the Ontario Salt Company, patented a new adaptation of
Platt’s Evaporator that saved heat, reduced smoke, and reduced the amount of
labour required.55 Changes of that type and scope occurred in rapid succession
throughout the period in issue.
Thus it appears that the Canadian salt men were enterprising and innova-
tive. They rose to the challenge posed by ill-suited technology with a flurry of
inventive activity and, in the process, created an industry that was, potentially,
very profitable. Although appropriate technology is essential to a successful
undertaking, that factor alone does not ensure profitability. Successful industrial
development is at least as dependent on extrinsic, contextual factors, such as
government subsidization and tarification policies, as it is on purely internal,
technological ones. In this case, the Goderich salt-makers competed not only
against one another in the search for the best evaporation technology but also
against a powerful, stable monopoly whose interests were preserved and pro-
51″Salt Patent” Signal (20 January 1870) 2.
52″Dr. McLean’s Salt Patent” Signal (7 April 1870) 2.
531t used the “return flue principle.” Heat travelled 120 feet up the pans before reaching the
stack. It produced even heat, which improved the quality of the salt, and was more fuel efficient,
which made salt production even cheaper (“Town Talk” Signal (4 May 1871) 3).
54The Empire Salt Works and the Victoria Salt Well both used this model (Signal (15 June
55See “Town Talk” Signal (2.2 June 1871) 3.
1871)).
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
tected by the United States government. For its part, the Canadian government
refused to do as the Signal had predicted, namely, to “do a little at the game of
tit for tat which would set matters all right.”‘5
IV. The American Competitor: The Vultures of Onondaga
This story is familiar. A nascent Canadian industry, based on almost infi-
nite natural resources and endowed with natural competitive advantages,
attracted, too quickly, too many creative participants to serve a too-small home
market. The industry could not overcome a tariff barrier that protected U.S.
markets.57 Canada could not raise a tariff of its own, partly because it was phil-
osophically opposed to restrictions on free trade, and partly because such a tar-
iff would have had to be applied against imports from Mother England, some-
thing that would have broken one of the last links between the metropolis and
its former colony. 8 The U.S. monopoly, permitted to earn excess profits by a
protective tariff and by its own market dominance, was able to “dump” surplus
salt on the Canadian market in an attempt to swamp its upstart competitors. 9
The Canadian competitor was left swimming upstream, waiting either for the
Canadian government to check the flood that overflowed the protective barrier
5 6Signal, supra note 46.
57In 1866, the Reciprocity Treaty that had governed trade between the U.S. and Canada was ter-
minated by the American’s, whose free trade convictions were tempered by the need to recover
from the Civil War. A series of tariffs were placed on imported goods. The tariff on salt was 70
cents per barrel, 58% of the average price at Goderich.
Everyone, from Goessman and Hunt to the Signal and the London Free Press to the Chicago
Tribune and the [Toronto] Monetary and Commercial Times –
Insurance Chronicle [hereinafter
Monetary Times] agreed that, but for the tariff, Onondaga would have lost its markets in both Can-
ada and the Western States (see Monetary Times (23 June 1871) 884), though it might have been
able to maintain them in New York State. Thanks to Goessman’s report, Onondaga also recognized
that risk and spared no expense in lobbying Congress to maintain the tariff. The company’s argu-
ments in favour of tariff protection mirrored those of the Goderich salt men in their pleas for recip-
rocal action by the Government of Canada. G.A. Finkelnburg, a member of the Ways and Means
Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives, which was conducting hearings concerning a
reduction in tariffs, wrote as follows to Richard Hawley: “As to the particular subject of salt, we
heard at length the Syracuse and Saginaw salt manufacturers by themselves and their attorneys.
The burden of their argument was the competition to be dieaded from Goderich in case of any
reduction of the present duty” [emphasis added] (“Mr. Hawley and the Duty on Salt” Signal (24
April 1872) 2). In 1869, the company lobbied for a further increase in the tariff of 3 cents (see
“What We Pay for Salt” The [Chicago] Tribune (11 May 1868), reprinted in “What the Americans
Pay for Salt” Signal (25 May 1869) 2). Onondaga was successful in retaining the protective Amer-
ican tariff, although the Government of the United States did reduce it by 50% in 1870.
58This’point was argued by the editor of the Signal (“The Reason Why” Signal (8 December
1871) 2). To his way of thinking, only a U.S. annexationist could suggest tariffs against English
imports. Canadian tariff policy is discussed further below at text accompanying note 77ff.
59Canadians of the day would have added a third factor to the list, namely, inherent unscrupu-
lousness. In A.Conjunction of Interests: Business, Politics and Tariffs 1825-1879 (Toronto: Univer-
sity of Toronto Press, 1986) at 117, Ben Forster observed that:
it was easy to inflate American competitive unfairness io mythical proportions. To the
Americans was ascribed behaviour of the utmost ruthlessness –
behaviour in which
no self-respecting Canadian would indulge. The hidden assumption was that rivalry
among Canadians was gentlemanly: only Americans sold goods below cost; only
Americans hired unscrupulous agents; only Americans (and some Englishmen) pro-
duced mediocre goods and tried to palm them off as products of highest quality.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
or for the U.S. government to remove the barrier, permitting a reversal of the
flood.
The Salt Company of Onondaga was formed by the amalgamation, in
1860, of various salt makers in four districts around Syracuse, New’ York. Dur-
ing the 1860s and 1870s, the Onondaga monopoly did not realize any real pro-
ductive efficiencies or economies of scale,’ achievements which, according to
Trebilcock, though never apparent with cartels, can sometimes constitute the
one saving grace of monopolies.” Onondaga continued to use the kettle method
of evaporation during the early 1870s, adopting the pan method only after minor
changes in national tariffs caused concern that it might have to compete with
Canadian salt producers. It did, however, develop advantages typical of a well-
organized, stable cartel, such as the appointment of sales agents in key markets,
the establishment of general guidelines ensuring uniformity in the quality of the
salt and the mode of preparing it for market, and the employment of a highly-
paid, expert chemist (Goessman) to direct production.62 Onondaga also man-
aged to achieve what most monopolists seek: enormous profits.63
The Signal was as passionate in its venomous attacks on the Onondaga
monopolists and their malicious predatory pricing as it was in its promotion of
the local salt industry and of the welfare of Goderich in general. A positive com-
ment on Onondaga never appeared in the Signal:
A GREEDY COMPANY
That the Onondaga Salt Company is very enterprising there can be no question.
No effort is spared by its officers or agents to push their salt into every city, town
and village in the country – nothing is overlooked which can advance its interests
and injure or destroy its rivals. But it is pre-eminently a greedy institution, the sole
idea of its managers being to make money by any means, however unfair.64 That
we65 are not vilifying a Company which is the strongest rival Goderich can have,
we may state that its Canadian agent at Toronto has flooded the country with cir-
culars stating the prices at which Onondaga salt will be sold at the various stations
along the Grand Trunk from Toronto to Goderich. One would naturally think that
6See Harden, supra note 13.
6t Compare Trebilcock, supra note 3 at 295.
62See Hunt, supra note 22 at 20.
63Based on an original investment of $200,000, Onondaga was able, in 9 years, to purchase prop-
erty worth $1,500,000 and to distribute cash dividends of $2,500,000. It was owned by fewer than
50 people. See “What We Pay for Salt,” supra note 57.
64Michael Bliss, A Living Profit: Studies in the Social History of Canadian Business, 1883-1911
(Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1974) at 28 [hereinafter A Living Profit], made the point that the
pursuit of profit for its own sake was never advocated by the Canadian press as an aim of Canadian
businessmen. From their perspective, that approach to profit could be employed only by foreigners.
65The Signal frequently attempted to show that it was not simply biased in favour of the Gode-
rich salt interest by publishing speeches and letters by Americans, whether in or out of Congress,
who were gouged, or whose constituents were gouged, by the protected Onondaga Company. The
following letter to the editor was signed “ANTI-MONOPOLIST”:
Perhaps within the memory of few, has there been such a determined attempt of a small
clique, to bolster up a monopoly as at present shows itself in the article of salt, and
never, since the days of the Stuarts, even in that old worn out and despised country
England, have the interests of the public generally been so persistently disregarded
(“The Salt Monopoly” Signal (30 July 1868) 2).
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THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
the farther the salt was sent by rail, the higher would be the price demanded, but
such is not the case. The price gradually falls as Goderich is approached, until, at
last, the climax is capped by making the price asked in this town the lowest on the
whole list. At Toronto, it is about $1.60, whereas at Goderich, after having been
carried over a day’s journey by rail it is sold at $1.32.66 Of course the reason is
obvious. It is that, if possible, an enterprise which is of vital importance to Canada,
in a national point of view, may be crushed. Such action on the part of the Onon-
daga Company will open the eyes of our salt manufacturers. They have wily and
unscrupulous opponents,67 and they must enter into a battle at once- (notes
added] s
The editor of the Signal, evidently aware that it is easier to criticize than to cre-
ate, was ready with advice as to how this battle should be fought. It is worth not-
ing that his own interests, in the form of advertising revenues, were inextricably
linked to those of the salt men.
Agents should be appointed for the sale of Goderich salt at once in all parts of
Canada, and by every legitimate means, including a liberal use of printer’s ink,
public attention should be aroused to the patriotism and profit of using it in pref-
erence to any other. It is right, moreover, that our people should impress on the
Government the necessity of clapping a good round duty on American salt without
delay.
69
The Signal also offered advice to any Americans reading its pages:
It is well that our American cousins are beginning, even at this late hour, to dis-
cover that they are the victims of an unscrupulous monopoly. … [Over six million
dollars have] been extorted from the consumers of this necessary of life by a
worse, because less resistible system than that of highway robbery. American cit-
izens need not look to Syracuse for justice. Let them compel their legislators to
enact, that brine salt shall be admitted into their territory free of duty70 and we
66A few months later, the London Free Press, a paper that was at least somewhat less partial than
the Signal, carried an article that confirmed the story about the circulars and supported the idea
that Onondaga was dumping overflow salt on the Canadian market. While (unpatriotic) Goderich
farmers could buy Onondaga salt for $1.30 per barrel, farmers near Detroit had to pay $2.45 per
barrel (Free Press, (27 October 1868)).
67The Free Press explained how it was that the Americans could “compete”: “It must be remem-
bered that it is only the surphs that is shipped here at these rates by the Americans, and that, in
order to arrest the development of the new Canadian industry and retain the market themselves.
Should they succeed in so doing, they would as soon as possible raise the rates again” (Free Press
(27 October 1868)).
That U.S. exports consisted only of surplus salt was also a conclusion of the 1870 report of a
House of Commons Committee (see infra note 86ff.) In 1876, when asked by the Chairman of the
House Committee on the Salt Interest to explain how Americans could compete successfully with
Canadian manufacturers, even though Canadian salt was produced less expensively than American
salt, Samuel Platt said: “The Americans cannot compete successfully with the Canadians in the
article of salt. It is only their surplus salt they send to Canada, and which they sell at a loss”
(“Select Committee,” supra note 22 at 5). Although the notion of “surplus” was attacked with great
scepticism by free traders, the story of the Goderich salt makers and their spokesmen remained
unchanged throughout the period in issue.
68Signal (11 June 1868).
61bid.,
7Tariffs were an easy scapegoat for Canadian businessmen. They were often blamed for Cana-
da’s economic woes. In the case of salt, those accusations may have been true. Some evidence of
that truth can be gleaned from the economic boom that occurred late in 1872. The salt tariff had
been reduced in August of that year. In its New Year’s editorial, the Signal reported that the reduc-
tion brought to an end the “state of depression” that had struck Goderich early in 1872 and “gave
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
guarantee that the manufacturers of Huron will speedily remedy the evil by selling
in the United States, a better quality of salt at an equitable advance on the cost of
production. We are astonished our shrewd neighbors allow themselves to be
preyed upon by the vultures of Onondaga. [note added]71
More than a mere promoter of the industry, the Signal thus appointed itself guar-
antor of the good faith and ability of the Goderich salt men. Bad faith was epi-
things a more cheery aspect.” For the remainder of the season, all wells “were worked to their
utmost capacity, and vessels could not be obtained to convey the manufactured article away fast
enough to supply the demand which existed in the American market” (“1872″ Signal (8 January
1873)).
The Toronto Telegraph also recognized that the salt industry faced exceptionally unfair circum-
stances:
It does not appear reasonable that we should be undersold by the Americans in such
an article as salt, when we have it in such superabundance at Home; and especially
unreasonable is it, that the Americans should have the opportunity not only of under-
selling our home producers, but of absolutely destroying the home market altogether.
That, it is true, is an exceptional case; but the more reason there must be of treating
it in an exceptional way, by such a custom’s levy as shall give the home producer at
least a fair chance (Telegraph (23 March 1870)).
71″An Oswego Journal on Salt” Signal (27 January 1870) 2. The introduction of a bill to reduce
the U.S. tariff on salt occasioned joy and passion for the Signal, as though its editor was celebrating
a personal victory. The following editorial amply displays that economic injustice was not viewed
dispassionately. The inclusion of an editorial from the Buffalo Express gives further proof that the
Signal was not alone in its pursuit of fair trade:
CONGRESS ON THE SALT TARIFF
A change is coming over the spirit of our cousins’ dream and they have made up their
minds to destroy the gigantic Onondaga combination which has waxed fat by a system
of extortion. Our American neighbours feel rather inclined to accuse Providence for
providing them with a native supply of salt which has caused them to pay twice or
thrice more for the article than if they imported it from Ontario. They have at last dis-
covered, both legislators and electors, that they have been, as for years we have endeav-
ored to show them, the victims of the “leech that hath two daughters,” Syracuse and
Saginaw, which were always crying “give, give” and which could never be satisfied.
We congratulate the Buffalo Express on having reached the light. That organ is now
making a manful stand in the interests of the people, and from it we copy the following
pithy statement of
THE SALT SWINDLE
The tariff on salt, which the House, by its splendid vote day before yester-
day resolved to have reduced one half, is 18 cts per 100 pounds in bags.
The infamous enormity of this tax is [no more] … The House yesterday did
the very best thing of the season –
the best thing, that is, as a demonstra-
tion of sound sense and honest fidelity to popular rights and public inter-
ests. We refer to the overwhelming vote by which it commanded the Com-
mittee on Ways and Means to bring in a bill reducing [the] tariff on salt fifty
percent. The salt monopoly, which has its headquarters at Syracuse, is by
all odds the most flagrant, outrageous and odious that this country has ever
known. By State legislation and National legislation, the greedy combina-
tion had succeeded in making itself absolute master in the United States of
the market of a commodity which enters into the daily subsistence of every
man, woman and child. Either at Albany or at Washington it has seemed
of late years to be utterly vain to contend against the power of the influence
with which it stood fortified in its unrighteous domination. The news of this
sudden, staggering blow that has been dealt fairly in its teeth at last by the
Representative House of Congress is news worth welcoming by a salute of
guns.
This bill, which still had to go through the Senate, did not become law until two years later, on
1 August 1872.
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THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
tomized by the monopolists themselves, who, not content with making unjust
and excessive profits, were busy stealing the patents of Goderich’s great inven-
tors.Z
Though the Signal did not get much support from the leading Toronto
papers in its attacks on the vultures of Onondaga, the Goderich newspaper was
not alone. 3 In a speech to a group of Toronto businessmen in March of 1870,
C. T. Hurrell told another story of Onondaga’s unscrupulousness.74 Hurrell
charged that, just before the close of Great Lakes navigation in the late autumn
of 1869, the Onondaga company “slaughtered”75 the Canadian market, flooding
it with salt sold at giveaway prices. The result was that for the entire winter, the
400 people directly employed by the Goderich salt industry were “thrown out
of work and were on the verge of starvation. 7 6
V. The Response of the Dominion: Reciprocity First
During the first quarter of 1870, diverse voices –
some in search of equity,
called for the raising of a Canadian tariff. It seemed like
others, of revenge –
the obvious thing to do. As Ben Forster has pointed out, however, tariffs are
established and imposed not by newspapers or interest groups such as the Gode-
rich salt manufacturers, but by governments, and always in a broad political and
economic context.71 If a Canadian tariff was not imposed upon American salt
72See “The ‘Leader’ on Salt” Signal (20 August 1869) 2.
73Both the Leader and the Globe were frequently cited, contemptuously, by the editor of the Sig-
nal for indirectly encouraging, through their dogmatic insistence on free trade, the destruction of
an infant Canadian industry.
74 Hurrell later became the Toronto agent of the Canadian Salt Association. At the time of this
speech, his relationship with the salt producers is not clear. He advocated their interests in Toronto,
but whether he was paid to do so is unknown. Perhaps the salt men were organized unofficially
and worked together to appoint agents and spokesmen long before the formation of the cartel.
75See generally Bliss, supra note 64. See also Forster, supra note 59 at 117, where he described
the oft-repeated story that Americans were deliberately underpricing their goods to flood the mar-
ket, destroy competition, and crush infant industries. That practice was known as “slaughtering”
to contemporaries. Forster concluded:
While such intent undoubtedly existed in some cases, Canadian protectionists per-
ceived it as a pervasive conspiracy. At some meetings of the Ontario Manufacturers’
Association, speaker after speaker would rise to bring forth some variation on arche-
typal tales of woe concerning imports from the United States, steadily reinforcing com-
monly held perceptions. The erection of a high tariff wall was seen as of the utmost
necessity.
So pervasive was this perception of conspiracy that the meetings of the Ontario Manufacturers’
Association were often subject to sarcastic caricature. For a particularly entertaining example of
such caricature, see A. Skaife, The Comedy of Trade; or, Every Man for Himsel. As Recently Per-
formed at Ottawa, by a Distinguished Company of Amateur Legislators (Montreal: Dawson Bros.,
1876) [hereinafter Comedy of Trade].
76 “Great Protection Meeting in Toronto” Signal (24 March 1870) 2. No reference to such unem-
ployment and starvation was found in the Signal itself during the period in question. The relevant
issues of the newspaper may have been damaged or gone missing. It seems more likely, however,
that Mr. Hurrell was engaging in hyperbole.
77Forster, supra note 59 at 4. The following discussion on Canadian tariff policy is based almost
entirely on Forster’s comprehensive work. Any original contribution on my part is related solely
to the question of salt, which is mentioned by Forster on several occasions, but only in passing.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
imports, the reason is found not in an analysis of relations between Goderich
and Onondaga but in an analysis of relations between Ottawa and Washington.
The years immediately following Confederation were dominated by a
desire to return to “Reciprocity.”78 In the same year that salt was discovered in
Goderich, the U.S. abrogated the Reciprocity Treaty. That free trade relationship
had been much-favoured by businessmen and farmers and was highly popular
in the daily press, for it “expedited trade and enlarged the possibilities for indi-
vidual profit.” Coming as it did at the end of the American Civil War, the abro-
gation of the Treaty was virtually inevitable for structural and economic rea-
sons. But that was not understood in Canada, where abandonment of the Treaty
was blamed on lobbyists and policy-makers: it was seen as a political failure.
Among Canadians, therefore, strong hope remained that the Americans would
reconsider. The dominant mood, according to Forster, was one of “hope beyond
hope,” a vain expectation that, with time and the continuing independent exis-
tence of Canada, Americans would temper their annexationism and their hostil-
ity to Great Britain, permitting them to implement a fairer commercial policy.
“Antagonizing the United States was, therefore, unwise: this idea dominated
Canadian policy decisions on tariff and other matters from before Confederation
at least until 1870.” It was in this context, then, that the Canadian salt industry
had to develop. Raising the tariff clamoured for by the Signal was clearly con-
sidered an antagonizing act to be avoided. The Signal exhibited the spirit of the
times in a somewhat contradictory fashion –
always promoting the return to
Reciprocity, but permitting an exception for its pet industry. High-minded mod-
eration and calculated inactivity defined the response of Sir John A. MacDo-
nald’s federal government. It was not until 1870 that the government realized
that its “policy of moderation was endlessly one of hope, not of realization.” A
conjunction of conditions in 1869 led to a shift away from conciliation –
an
economic slump, a large government deficit, and “competitive congestion” in
several industries, which had now developed sufficiently that they could com-
fortably supply the domestic markets.79
Industrial development up to this time created the possibility of establish-
ing a broad-ranging protectionist coalition. The first major manifestation of that
coalition occurred in March, 1870, with a meeting of approximately eighty
Ontario merchants and manufacturers in Toronto. C.T. Hurrell, the salt agent
who spoke of the odious slaughtering undertaken by the Onondaga Company,
received unanimous approval from that group for his motion on the govern-
ment’s “bounden duty” to protect Canadian manufactures and to encourage
industry and enterprise in the country.”0 It was in reporting the events of that
meeting that the Toronto Telegraph supported a policy of tariffs for salt.”‘ At
approximately the same time, Charles Tupper united a group of Members of
Parliament and met with Cabinet officials to discuss a change of policy, from
78Forster considered “the crowning achievement of the BNA colonies’ attempt to liberalize trade
[to be] the Reciprocity Treaty of 1854, which made a wide variety of natural products mutually
free between the colonies and the United States” (ibid. at 6).
791bid. at 52, 68, 71.
80″Great Protection Meeting in Toronto,” supra note 76.
81Telegraph (23 March 1870).
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THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
the “tentative and conciliatory” policy being pursued at the time to a “purely
national policy” that “would tend to promote our internal commerce, and
cement the union among the several parts of the Dominion.””2
During the early 1870s, a glut of petitions, displaying strong alliances
between farmers and manufacturers from across the Dominion, were received
by both the Senate and the House of Commons. Petitions from the salt makers
were delivered to the Senate by the County of Huron and the Township of Hul-
let.” Their position at this time was best summarized by the Bruce Telescope:
American salt is nearly a dollar a barrel cheaper in Canada than it is in the United
States. This is undoubtedly below actual cost-
the price is the result of an effort
to undersell and crush out the Canadian manufacturer of a superior article. There
is no question that on the whole the Canadian public are gainers for the present;
but is it wise to allow monopolists, who are, themselves protected by a heavy duty,
to crush out a branch of Canadian industry in its infancy? Would not the Canadian
public submit to paying a slightly higher figure for their salt in order to prevent
the monopolist from succeeding in his effort. If the manufacturers of both coun-
tries were on equal terms, we would say let them fight it out, and let, as we said
before, the best producer get the patronage of the community. But as the parties
stand, the imposition of a duty on American salt, it would appear to us, is not so
much a protection against competition as a protection against a wealthy corpora-
tion enriched on unjust gains, using its influence to destroy a formidable rival
whose prosperity would be a great public gain. 84
That editorial is a fine example of the rhetoric that became increasingly com-
mon during the remaining years of the nineteenth century to the effect that
Canadians were free traders first but forced to make exceptions in particular cir-
cumstances. Also noteworthy in that passage is the patriotic, mercantilist rea-
soning so often used by both the Signal and the London Free Press to convince
their readers of that which is at best counterintuitive from the consumer’s per-
spective, namely that consumption of apparently inexpensive imports was con-
trary to their long-term interests and that it was better to invest in local industry
by paying higher prices. Being a Canadian, exhorted the Signal, meant not only
82Halifax Citizen (14 March 1870), cited in Forster, supra note 59 at 75.
83House of Commons Journals, 1870 at 17, 26, 36, 51, 66, 97, 129, 166, 286.
The petition from Huron County was published in the Senate Journals, 1870 at 27 (28 February
1870), “praying that a just and reasonable tariff of duties be imposed on wheat, flour, corn, oats,
hops, coal, salt and fruit trees imported from the United States into Canada.”
Petitioning was done cooperatively, with one county praying for its own interests as well as for
those of its neighbours. Thus, Huron County prayed for a duty on fruit trees, which were a product
of Oxford County, and Oxford County prayed for a duty on salt, which was not produced in that
region. The Oxford County petition read as follows:
That while your petitioners are favorable to the principles of free trade, they do feel
that under the present trade relations between the Dominion of Canada and the United
States, it is desirable and necessary, in order to promote the growth of the agricultural,
commercial, manufacturing and all the industrial interests of the Dominion, to impose
an import duty on wheat, flour, corn, salt and coal (5 March 1870, cited in Forster,
supra note 59 at 74).
The petition from the Township of Hullet was also published in the Senate Journals, 1870, at
65 (21 March 1870), praying for the adoption of a tariff “as will at least secure to Ontario the home
markets of the Dominion for her natural products.” The Signal reported on the circulation of that
petition and encouraged readers to sign it (“Home Manufacturers” Signal (24 February 1870) 2).
84Reprinted in “The Salt Duty” Signal (10 March 1870) 2. Seaforth is located in Bruce County.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
paying higher prices, but wanting to do so. Thus, notionally private decisions
– what to buy and at what price – were portrayed in moralistic tones as public
choices, based on that which was right. People were made to understand that
higher prices, which would naturally engender prosperity and long-term public
gain, were both wise and just. The market price was not only too low but was
destructive of the national interest.”
The House of Commons responded to the appeal for protection with the
creation, on 28 February 1870, of a Select Committee “to enquire into and
report on the extent and condition of the Hop growing and Salt interests in Can-
ada.”86 That Committee submitted its report to the House on 17 March 1870. No
reader of the Signal would have disagreed with its conclusions:
1st. That the supply of salt in that section of the Dominion is practically
unlimited …
to make 3,000 barrels per day.
2nd. That the number of wells now sunk is capable of supplying brine enough
3rd. That during a greater portion of last year, the Goderich salt wells have
been closed up, and the large capital invested in this important branch of Canadian
industry, has been during that time wholly unremunerative, and that, unless some
change takes place in our trade relations with the United States, this state of things
is likely to continue.
4th. Your Committee further find that the Canadian is unable to compete with
the American manufacturer, even in the Canadian market, for the following
reasons:-
1st. The American manufacturers have their home market exclusively to
themselves; the duty on salt admitted into the United States being a practical pro-
hibition.
2nd. After supplying the home market thus secured to the American manu-
facturer, by their own Government, and supplying that market at prices more than
fairly remunerative, their surplus production is exported to Canada, and there sold
at prices which render it impossible for the Canadian manufacturer to retain the
Canadian market.
3rd. That the State Government supplies the Salt Companies of the State of
New York, with capital estimated at $10,000,000, for the nominal sum of 3/4 per
cent., and thus secures to said Companies important advantages over Companies
dependent on private capital alone.
4th. The American manufacturers have an advantage in return freight, which
is an important item in the conveyance of so bulky an article as salt, to market.8 7
85″Buy Canadian!” was a call often reported in the pages of both the Signal and the London Free
Press:
If the public wish to help the salt works of Ontario, let every one who is a consumer
“ask for Goderich salt,” and accept no other. Directly a healthy and persistent demand
springs up for the product, storekeepers will provide themselves with it, and the Amer-
ican article, imported at an annual cost of about $130,000 will be excluded, and the
money annually paid out for its purchase will be spent at home, and give employment
to thousands of willing workers. We hope the patriotic citizens of Ontario will sustain
“home manufactures,” without which we should be a poor miserable country indeed!
(Free Press (27 October 1868))
There was a very real sense in which the consumer was an active participant in the agricultural,
commercial and industrial development of the nation. If a distinction existed between the private
and public realms, it appeared to be greatly blurred.
86House of Commons Journals, 1870, at 28. M. C. Cameron, the member for Huron and later
87The Onondaga Salt Company was closer to the Lake Ontario ports. In addition, Canadian yes-
trustee of the Canadian Salt Association, was appointed to that committee.
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
Your Committee therefore respectfully recommend that the House speedily
adopt such measures as shall tend to relieve this important industry from the
depressing influences to which your Committee have referred. 88
Identifying the problem and its supposed causes was simple. The difficulty was
in proposing solutions that would be acceptable to those politicians who did not
count the salt industry among the legitimate exceptions to free trade dogma.
Subsidization in the form of low-interest loans of the type offered by the State
of New York to its producers never seems to have been considered.89 Canadian
policy-makers showed themselves to be less than creative in following the pro-
tectionist examples of the United States and Britain. Debate in the House of
Commons focused solely on tariffs – whether a tariff ought to have been
imposed and, if so, how significant it should have been.9″
The first motion regarding an import duty on salt was introduced on 7
March 1870, ten days before the submission of the Committee’s report.9″ It was
withdrawn the same day, without explanation. On 29 April 1870, the Committee
of Ways and Means, which was responsible for the preliminary development of
tariff policy during this period, introduced a resolution to amend the Duties of
Customs Act.9′ On salt, it proposed the imposition of a duty of five cents per
fifty-six pound bushel.93 The U.S. duty on salt, which was twice as high, was
considered unfair by Canadians; the Canadian duty was thought to be entirely
legitimate. As early as 1868, the London Free Press had maintained that it was
“a question whether an incidental protection of say 30 cents per barrel against
foreign salt would not be judicious, thus enabling the salt makers of Goderich
to make a fair living profit.”’94 In order that the link with the Motherland not be
breached, the resolution exempted from duty all “Salt imported from the United
Kingdom or any British Possessions.” After several attempted amendments, all
sels, which carried barley, lumber and grain across the lake, returned with salt as ballast at a very
low freight rate. Onondaga could deliver its salt to Toronto for 10 cents per barrel, whereas the cost
of delivery from Goderich was 40 cents (“Select Committee,” supra note 22 at 4).
88House of Commons Journals, 1870 at 83.
89Such subsidization was not proposed for any industry. With respect to salt, it has already been
seen that a well could be sunk and works erected for less than $30,000. It is therefore unclear why
the New York state salt makers would require $10,000,000.
901n The Protective Tariff in Canada’s Development: Eight Essays on Trade and Tariffs when
Factors Move, with Special Reference to Canadian Protectionisri 1870-1955 (Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1966) at 6, J. H. Dales convincingly described the manner in which Canadian
leaders parroted what they thought to be the American recipe for commercial and industrial suc-
cess. He observed that the most persuasive argument in favour of Canadian protectionism was the
very success of American protectionism, which had been transformed in the minds of Canadians
from one of the reasons for American success to the reason for it. Dales argued that the contrary
was in fact true.
91Moved by one Oliver, Member for Oxford County, and seconded by M.C. Cameron, the
motion recommended import duties of an undetermined quantity on “Wheat, Flour, Indian Corn,
Hops, Salt and Bituminous Coal” (House of Commons Journals, 1870 at 41).
92S.C. 1868, c. 44.
93At approximately 30 cents per barrel, this was the amount by which the Canadian Salt Asso-
ciation raised the price of salt during its first week of operations.
94London Free Press (27 October 1868). As the Signal had stated previously, such a cost was
and of such enormous benefit
one cent on every nine pounds of salt consumed –
so incidental –
that all should rally behind its imposition.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
of which failed, the resolution passed on 30 April 1870.9″ A further resolution
provided that salt, as well as the other items to which tariffs now applied, could
be imported free of duty once the Governor in Council had determined that the
United States permitted Canadian salt to be imported free of duty. Thus, the
House maintained its dedication to free trade.
Unfortunately for the salt men of Goderich, the House remained full. of
such dedicated members. Far from being defined by protectionist pressures,
Forster has remarked, the 1870 tariff was a reaction to the persistent refusal by
the United States to renegotiate Reciprocity. There had indeed been a shift in
Canadian policy, but it had not yet evolved to the point where Canadians were
willing to abandon strongly held ideological ideas, which had served their col-
onies well during the economic boom of the 1850s. The shift was a slight one,
from pure conciliation to a moderate form of retaliation, designed to convince
the United States that trade relations, as developed in that prior period, were still
desirable. A more important shift, which later developed with the National Pol-
icy, was in the promotion of internal rather than external markets, in support of
the economic function of Confederation as a free trade zone between provinces.
Being political and strategic rather than truly economic, the 1870 tariff pro-
voked a political reaction by free traders that led to its virtual abandonment little
more than a year later.96 On 4 April 1871, the Bill to amend the Act relating to
duties of customs passed its third reading in the House of Commons, absent the
majority of the customs duties, including the one on salt, that had been tempo-
rarily in force.97
VI. The Response of the Locality: Cooperative Combination
Salt, coal, fish, and flour were all bargaining chips used by the government
to negotiate a broad national policy. But the National Policy, still embryonic in
1871, was not fully developed until 1879. The early 1870s witnessed some con-
solidation of the protectionist perspective, but the demand for low tariffs and
reciprocity dominated Canadian policy until at least 1872, when Protection
became an issue in the national election. Thereafter it was central to Canadian
95House of Commons Journals, 1870, at 267-77.
96See generally Forster, supra note 59 at 75-76, 79-84. The government did not defend the tariff
for its intrinsic worth but only on its presumed importance in negotiations that were occurring in
Washington. In the meantime, opposition in the House of Commons grew. Disappointed as they
were with the magnitude of the 1870 tariff, protectionists did not unite in its defence. Because the
creation of the 1870 tariff had depended so much on what Forster called “a desperate appeal to per-
sonal and party loyalties,” the defeat of its central provisions in 1871 was practically inevitable
(ibid. at 84).
971t was in response to a petition from the Montreal Board of Trade, which prayed for “the repeal
of the duty imposed upon flour, wheat and other grain; and also on coal and salt,” that the Com-
mons first removed the salt duty. The petition was received on 6 March 1871; the amendment
removing salt was passed on 7 March (House of Commons Journals, 1871 at 48).
Three weeks later, various salt companies, including the Ontario Salt Company, the Victoria Salt
Works’ Company, the Dominion Salt Company, the Huron Salt Company and the McLean’s Salt
Works’ Company, delivered petitions to the House of Commons “praying that the protective duty
on Salt be re-imposed and continued, until a change is made in the American Tariff’ (House of
Commons Journals, 1871 at 174). Their petition was read on 3 April 1871; the amendments in their
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
politics. But that was too late for the salt men of Goderich, whose industry
matured faster than the national protectionist policy.
The Signal responded with resignation:
AN UNEXPECTED CLOUD
All that remains for salt manufacturers now is to manfully face the music … [O]ur
producers will have to be temporarily content with a smaller profit than they are
fairly entitled to … We should like to see all our salt men pulling together, until
better times, and think it would not be impolitic to enter into an amalgamation, so
that the temporary obstruction to our enterprise might be more bearable, being
equally divided. Though we are heartily sorry to find this cloud looming up when
our sky seemed so full of bright promise, we are still of the opinion that we have,
in this locality, overcome much more serious difficulties; and that, if we all pull
together, this obstruction, instead of injuring us, will act as a whetstone to our
energies.
98
During the Commons’ debates preceding the abandonment of the salt duty,
M.C. Cameron had argued powerfully for exceptional protection. He pointed
out that the press, with the sole exception of the Globe, was in support of the
resolution, and that thousands of people had signed petitions in its favour. It was
time to act in a self-interested manner so that the Dominion would no longer be
kept in “the humiliating position of waiting patiently on another nation to leg-
islate for the benefit of Canada.” There was a need for a Canadian commercial
policy, formed with a view solely to the interests of Canada. Free trade was
sound in theory, but under the prevailing conditions of trade with the U.S., trade
was not free.99
The salt men heard Cameron’s message, and took it upon themselves to act
in their best interests. Strengthened by the knowledge, as expressed by the Sig-
nal, that they were also acting in the best interests of the community, they
formed a cartel. On 29 June 1871, an indenture creating the Canadian Salt Asso-
ciation was signed.”t Obviously, the Signal favoured that move. So did the Lon-
don Free Press.
favour were introduced on 4 April. On that day, M.C. Cameron managed to get the Commons to
vote on 5 different amendments that would have included salt. All failed. In support of these
amendments, one Bowell said the following: “That in view of negociations [sic] now pending at
Washington between representatives on the part of the British Empire and the United States, touch-
ing questions which may lead to a renewal of the Reciprocity Treaty, it is in the opinion of this
House, inexpedient to repeal the duties now imposed upon certain articles …” (House of Commons
Journals, 1871 at 213-16).
9tSignal (30 March 1871) 2.
991bid.
100I was unable to find records of exactly which salt companies joined the CSA, though it seems
reasonable to assume that they included the five which jointly submitted a petition to the House
of Commons on 6 March 1871 (supra note 97), as well as the Seaforth and Merchants salt com-
panies. It is also known that the Caesarea Company did not join. As to the membership of the many
other then extant salt companies, there is no available record. The association itself was managed
by:
Thomas Short, President: Shareholder in the original Goderich Salt Company, President of
Standby & Co., the barrel manufacturer,
Richard Ransford, V.P.: Son of Henry Ransford, manager of the Clinton works;
M.P. Hays, V.P.: Founder of the Seaforth Salt Co. and member of the Huron County Council;
S. Deflor, Secretary: Shareholder in the original Goderich Salt Company, member of the Huron
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
The surprise came from the editors of the Monetaiy Times, normally purist
free traders, who said: “We don’t like the principle of the thing, but it can easily
be endured for a time if it shall be the means of putting the salt men a little better
on their feet.”. All salt was to be bought and sold through trustees appointed
by the CSA.
The Canadian Salt Association was far from unique in late-nineteenth-
century Canada. Michael Bliss has portrayed “The Flight From Competition” as
the dominant Canadian business ethos of the late nineteenth century. He has
demonstrated that an endless parade of trusts, cartels and combinations formed,
broke down, and re-formed under the same or different names. Bliss called the
restrictionist movement in Canadian business a practical response to the insecu-
rities of open competition, the fear of failure that the Montreal Commercial
called “dyspepsia of the mind.” Bliss maintained a healthy scepticism regarding
the motives of businessmen who combined. He spoke of justifications for car-
telization and often found reason, in primary sources, to describe late-
nineteenth-century businessmen as dissemblers, who paid mere lip service to
the theoretical orthodoxy of the day, economic liberalism and free trade.’t z
It could be argued that the salt men of Goderich combined in the same dis-
sembling spirit and that their true intent was both to raise the price of salt, so
as to gouge the Canadian consumer, and to contain innovation, so as to reduce
County Council and former mayor of Goderich.
The Association’s Trustees were:
M.C. Cameron: Member of Parliament for Huron;
A.M. Ross: Manager of the local Bank of Commerce and Treasurer of the Goderich Town Coun-
Samuel Platt: Discoverer of salt in Goderich and inventor of the pan evaporation system;
Dr. McLean: Owner of the McLean Salt Works, co-owner of the Dominion Company, driller of
the original salt well in 1866 and inventor of a steam removal system.
Five other men representing five other wells were also members (Monetary Times (7 July 1871)
cil;
4).
101Monetary Times (28 July 1871) 64.
10 2A Living Profit, supra note 64. Bliss further develops this theme in Northern Enterprise: Five
Centuries of Canadian Business (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1987). Bliss concluded:
Businessmen formed guilds, associations, pools, trusts, and mergers with the aim of
restricting the free market in every form of enterprise –
transportation, manufacturing,
finance, and distribution. They used a wide variety of methods to attain this end,
including written agreements, sworn oaths, bonds, fines, expulsions, boycotts, legally
enforced contracts, dumping on foreign markets, “friendly” persuasion, mobilizing
public opinion, and bringing in the power of the state. They’denied the maxim that
competition was the life of trade, and justified their combinations as being in the public
interest and in the reasonable interest of honest businessmen who only desired to obtain
a “living profit” (A Living Profit, ibid. at 34-35).
Bliss cited the Commercial (31 July 1883) as authority for the following conclusion:
Restrictionist ideas, which came to dominate business discussions of competition, were
the not always thought-out conclusions and arguments that emerged from everyday life
in the marketplace. Competition was the life of trade, but it was even more important
to get a “living profit.” Being human, most businessmen were no more willing than
farmers or workers to engage in a wide-open competitive struggle for economic sur-
vival, to be puppets dancing on strings held by the invisible hand (A Living Profit, ibid.
at 140).
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
the need for capital expenditure. It bears repetition that the Canadian salt indus-
try could never have been successful without technological innovation and that,
once it began to develop, salt production technology evolved with tremendous
speed. For the salt maker, the rapidity of those changes was punishing –
each
change required new capital investment, long before prior investment had been
profitably employed. Schumpeter described such circumstances as “creative
destruction,” and has suggested that excessive competition can justify restric-
tions on free trade and competition for the purpose of stability.103 In the late
nineteenth century, central-Canadian businessmen did not speak of creative
destruction but of the demoralization of trade. Their concern was that “[i]n a
purely competitive marketplace a businessman had no security, no certainty, no
sense of control over his own fate. He could be hard-working, honest, and
thrifty, but still find his business and his livelihood destroyed by competitors
who were wealthier, more efficient, or less scrupulous.”‘” Rather than as a
means of cooperatively enduring the temporary setback that was Parliament’s
decision to abandon the salt duty, therefore, the salt cartel may have been a
means of reducing the dangers and harmful effects of excess competition. In
modem terms, the salt combination was a straightforward example of anti-
innovation cartelization. And proof that its purpose was to inhibit innovation
could be found in the Caesarea Company, a superior competitor that refused to
join the cartel and that possessed innovative technology which, but for the arti-
ficiality of the cartel, would have permitted it to dominate the other’Goderich
salt manufacturers. From the perspective of the modem economist, who regards
such artificial restraints on innovation and competition as inefficient, the cartel
was villainous, and Caesarea was an innocent, injured party.
An inhabitant of 1870s Goderich might, however, have had a different per-
ception. The salt men shared their technological innovations with their local
confreres –
every salt maker was able to acquire Platt’s evaporator from Run-
ciman’s Foundry. Their new technology was patented only to thwart American
competitors. Both Sterry Hunt and the Signal encouraged them to share their
technology, even though such sharing would not be considered efficient or ratio-
nal by homo economicus. It appears from a reading of the available evidence
that the better view is that local development of the salt industry was not viewed
competitively, but cooperatively. Certainly the Signal, which commonly por-
trayed development of the community’s resource as a community affair to be
accomplished cooperatively, held that view. For that newspaper’s editor, all
members of the local region were allies in a battle, begun by an unscrupulous
foreign competitor, that could only be won if the entire community, farmers,
workers, businessmen, and consumers were united. From that perspective, the
villain was not the cartel, but Caesarea, which, by pushing technology beyond
what was required to defeat the foreigner and creating internal competition that
harmed members of the community, was guilty of unscrupulously destroying
the harmony of interests that the Signal had been so conscientious in promoting.
103J. Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, 3d ed. (New York: Harper & Row,
1950) especially at 84-85.
14A Living Profit, supra note 64 at 53-54.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
The universality of Canadian cartelization and combination during the late
nineteenth century is not explicable solely in terms of greed, fear of bankruptcy,
nor the economics of efficiency. Equally important was the pursuit of social har-
mony, the dominant theme in Canadian social history of the late nineteenth cen-
tury. That harmony was pursued not only by exhortation from the local press but
through conscious efforts to organize and institutionalize conflict. Protectionist
ideology, founded as it was on a romantic, falsely nostalgic vision of pre-
industrial societies in which there was comfortable integration of town and
country, was easily adapted to the pursuit of social harmony through local orga-
nization. Municipal and county government, which fostered harmonious devel-
opment by investing in local enterprise and by using subsequent profits to
improve the citizen’s quality of life, was one type of local organization. Another
was the combination of local manufacturers. Such organizations were not cre-
ated to avoid competition (although one effect of their creation may have been
a reduction in competition), but to ensure that the economic interests of a region
were properly presented to national or provincial governments. Communities
were represented not only by their elected leaders, but by all their leaders,
including businessmen.’05
Refusing a salt tariff which would have directly benefitted only the Gode-
rich region at the expense of all Canadian consumers may have been justifiable
from a national viewpoint. The people of Goderich disagreed. They had placed
great hope and faith in the Dominion government. In discovering and develop-
ing a new resource, Goderich had bestowed a significant benefit on the young
Dominion. It was only fair that the Dominion recognize Goderich’s right to
prosper from Confederation, one of the purposes of which was mutual support
in commercial and industrial development. Although such mutual support was
their hope, the inhabitants of Goderich were not dependent on the Dominion for
their prosperity. For that, they had always relied on themselves. When Parlia-
ment denied its support, the locality effectively regained a sort of independence,
which it pursued by the creation of a combination that would act in the commu-
nity’s interests. The Canadian Salt Association institutionalized the informal
form of cooperative local development that had preceded it. It is worth remem-
bering that the Signal recommended the amalgamation of the salt companies not
for the purpose of gouging the consumer, but so that local manufacturers could
share the burden imposed upon them by the Dominion government. The forma-
tion of the cartel was a community-based scheme that would enable it, once
again, to rise to a challenge to which it had risen on previous occasions’ 6
To the modem economist, the proper solution would have been to let the
lame ducks go to the wall. The salt market was over-supplied. Cutthroat com-
petition should have continued, forcing the weakest producers to leave the
industry and permitting the redeployment of resources to other more highly val-
ued economic activities. Cartelization only retarded efficient adjustment proces-
ses. 107 Such a response would have been particularly unlikely from people
105See Forster, supra note 59 at 202; Rutherford, supra note 24 at 176-81.
106See supra note 98: “An Unexpected Cloud.”
107Compare Trebilcock, supra note 3 at 298-99.
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
whose “patience and perseverance” and “unremitting toil” in taming the wilder-
ness of the eagles and the aborigines had only just begun “to bear fruit in the
shape of substantial comforts.”’08 Efficiency in those circumstances would have
meant going backwards in time, to something unthinkable. Cartelization was the
only option left. The community of Goderich acted for its own benefit, in a pio-
neering spirit.
Consistent with the pursuit of harmony, almost everyone believed, or said
they believed, that strong justifications could be found for the formation of a
Canadian salt cartel. Forster has warned that “the protectionists’ nationalism
and advocacy of the ideal of harmony are quite properly open to profound scep-
ticism.”” 9 In the case of the salt combination, there were economic considera-
tions that give rise to scepticism. At its core, that cartel,, like all cartels, was
about price. The producers were not happy with the price they were getting, and
they sought to increase it. When the market hit what they considered to be the
bottom, they acted. Just before the amalgamation, the Monetary Times reported
that “[t]he competition between manufacturers of Canadian salt has completely
broken down the market, and sales were made as low as $1.10 for car-loads.””‘
The cartel immediately raised the price of salt twenty-five per cent (thirty
cents a barrel). But, despite the cartel, the price corrected itself within several
months. This cartel was no less susceptible to breakdown than are theoretical
cartels.”‘ Bliss has shown that Canadian amalgamations and cartels of the late
nineteenth century suffered from an extremely high failure rate, because there
were plenty of enterprising individuals whose activities made it difficult to build
barriers around a free market. The situation faced by the Canadian Salt Asso-
ciation was no different.”‘ Despite its intention to act for the benefit of the com-
munity, self-interest often prevailed; it would be naYve to think otherwise. The
salt combination had many members, each of whom faced different cost struc-
tures. That situation rendered agreements as to a mutually advantageous com-
mon price difficult. Kincardine had cheaper wood, but did not yet have a rail-
way line. Seaforth and Clinton had the least expensive fuel and were closer to
Toronto by rail. Goderich had the cheapest labour, but did not have the fuel sup-
ply of the other three towns. Goderich had a better harbour, and its salt bed was
twice as thick.”‘ Cartel-induced higher prices create two further problems: each
member of the cartel has strong incentive to cheat; and, the prospect of excess
profits motivates new entry into the industry. Because all Goderich salt sales
lSHistorical Atlas, supra note 16 at 8.
109Forster, supra note 59 at 203.
“Monetary Times (23 June 1871) 892.
“‘See generally Trebilcock, supra note 3 at 295-96.
” 2The salt cartel, which was vindicated by the Court in 1871 and which broke down and
re-formed in 1874 only to break down again in 1877, was renewed on 1 March 1889, just as the
new anti-combines legislation was being discussed in the House of Commons. The cartel raised
the price of salt, in one day, by 90%, from 55 cents (note that the price must have continued to
drop after 1872) to $1.05 per barrel (A Living Profit, supra note 64 at 36). See also D. Robinson,
Seaforth Beginnings (Erin, Ont.: Boston Mills Press, 1987) at 42.
” 3See “The Kincardine Salt” Signal (17 September 1868) 2; Historical Atlas, supra note 16 at
8,9, 10.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
were made through the Association’s trustees, there was little opportunity to
cheat. There was, however, new entry. The Signal reported the successful com-
pletion of at least two new wells during the four months that the Association
existed.” 4 In addition, not all manufacturers joined the Association. The most
notable exception, as stated above, was Caesarea, the company that had
invented the most efficient evaporation method.”5
Having successfully combined, the salt makers of Goderich were able to
restore the price of salt to a level that ensured them a “living profit.” But having
decided to control only the price and to permit production to continue unabated,
the collapse of their pricing structure was inevitable. It did not require a crystal
ball to foresee that, given the rate at which new wells were being sunk (more
than four per year) and the incentive to produce to capacity created by artifi-
cially elevated prices, the markets for Goderich salt, circumscribed as they were
by the American tariff, would soon be over-supplied. On 23 June 1871, one
week before the formation of the Canadian Salt Association, the Monetary
Times concluded that “the difficulty with the Canadian salt interest is over-
production for the limits of.the market … T]hose who are sinking wells are not
acting wisely.”
No one in Goderich was surprised that this had occurred; it had been spo-
ken of often. Throughout the period, the Signal repeated two ideas. The first was
“drill more wells!””‘ The second was prophecy, disguised as
promotional –
promotion:
No doubt there are those in the various sections where salt has been found who
would have gladly seen it limited to their particular section, but such cannot be,
and it will be for those interested to consider at once where a market is to be had
for the manufactured article. The field is small in Canada compared with what
114Salt was found at Kincardine (Signal (15 September 1871)) and at Enniskillen, where there
was an “inexhaustible [well] for all time to come” (“Town Talk” Signal (22 September 1871) 3).
“15An interesting anecdote in support of Caesarea’s unscrupulous, anti-community methods of
competition appeared in an angry letter to the editor of the Signal by “FAIR-PLAY.” After sup-
porting the aims of the cartel, the writer said:
Now, such an arrangement if properly carried out would be very desirable and neces-
sary, to protect the great salt interest of Canada, as well as the interests of those who
patronize the trade. But I should like io know how it is that you allow barrels of salt
marked Caesarea to be sold containing only 200 lbs., barrel and all. Now 200 lbs. is
just two-thirds of a whole barrel; and at $1.20 for a whole barrel, two-thirds would just
be worth 80 cents; so if two-thirds brings $1.20, a full barrel would cost $1.80. How
is this, Gentlemen of the Canada Salt Association (“The Salt Question” Signal .(10
November 1871) 2).
A CSA inspector, M. Malcolm, replied on November 14th, explaining that the joke was on Fair-
play himself, as Caesarea was not a member of the CSA, which, in contradistinction to Caesarea,
guaranteed both weight and quality. Malcolm suggested that, in future, Fair-play ought to deal with
the only faithful organization in town –
the Canadian Salt Association.
t16″If we had 20 wells paying as well wouldn’t someone make money pretty fast?” (“Dividend,”
supra note 19);
“The Goderich Salt Co. has piled up 2008 cords [of wood] in its back yard…. How much would
20 such establishments consume?” (“A Nice Wood-Pile” Signal (13 February 1868) 2);
“If five wells have done so much towards increasing the population of Goderich, what, we ask,
would not from 50 to 100 wells between Goderich and Seaforth do towards creating a home
demand for the produce of the soil?” (“No Monopoly” Signal (12 November 1868) 2).
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
might be produced, even by the employment of local capital alone, and hence, it
will be necessary to use every legitimate means to secure free trade with the
United States. Our good town has gone into the manufacture very energetically.
We feel … that our salt men will do all in their power to secure the very widest
possible market for the saline wealth of Huron and Bruce.11 7
In 1868, Goderich had been swept by salt fever. By 1871, one thing was
clear: salt was not gold. It simply was not rare. As the Signal pointed out, for
the prosperity of the region to continue, the extension of Goderich’s markets
was imperative. It was the only acceptable solution. The salt makers tried to win
markets by improving their production process and reducing costs. While guar-
anteeing Goderich salt a large stake in the home market, such improvements did
not permit entry into the protected American market. There were also attempts
by the salt manufacturers to market their product worldwide.’ New uses for
salt were found. Advertisements in the Signal and the Globe encouraged its use
as a manure. Beginning late in 1870, a Bruce County copper mine successfully
replaced smelting with a new process that used refuse salt and sulphuric acid to
extract copper from its ore.” 9 And the local newspapers did their part by encour-
aging patriotic readers to buy Goderich salt. A Canadian salt duty would also
have permitted the expansion of the market in which Goderich salt could effec-
tively compete with American salt. Finally, combination permitted the expan-
sion, not of markets, but of production –
at the expense of consumers. Another
option did exist: the Goderich salt men could have followed the example of the
vultures of Onondaga and merged into a giant Canadian monopoly. It would be
interesting to know why they did not do so. One hypothesis may be formed
based on a story that appeared in the Monetary Times one month after the for-
mation of the Canadian Salt Association:
Our Salt manufacturers have learned a lesson upon combinations and comers in
so far as they affect the salt market. They have not only stopped all competition
amongst home producers but they have concluded a treaty of peace –
so we are
informed – with the Americans whereby each, Canadians and Americans, shall
have control of their own markets. We don’t like the principle of the thing, but it
can easily be endured for a time if it shall be the means of putting the salt men
a little better on their feet.120
This statement is alone in the available historical record. What it means is
unclear, but it may be that the plan of Onondaga all along had been one of con-
tainment, with the aim of not losing too much to the superior quality of Gode-
rich salt. The New Yorkers may not have been trying to crush the infant Cana-
dian industry after all, but merely trying to show that they meant to maintain
their American markets. It is possible that Onondaga would have been happy
117″Our Salt Region” Signal (17 September 1868) 2.
“58Goderich salt was shown at the Paris Exhibition even though it could never have been sold
profitably in a town as near as Kingston, Ontario (‘The Salt Wells of Goderich,” supra note 26).
The owners of several Goderich salt works went on regular promotional tours to Chicago and
Detroit.
119The Signal reported at least three large shipments of such salt, saying that the trade was
“likely to become important” (“Town Talk” Signal (15 September 1870) 2; “Town Talk” Signal (19
September 1871) 3).
12Supra note 101.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
with a market sharing agreement of the type described in the Monetary Times.’
Its predatory pricing could have been merely an attempt to show the Canadians
how serious it was about keeping them out of the U.S. market. If a market-
sharing agreement had been planned and negotiated, the formation of the cartel
would not have been a last-ditch effort to fight for a fair, living profit, but a pre-
requisite to the formation of an effective division of the market. Market sharing
could not have been accomplished with eighteen different companies acting in
their own interests. If true, this would also mean that Vice-Chancellor Strong
was not a valiant nation-builder holding out an opportunity to Canadian produc-
ers but a hard-headed realist, cynically granting businessmen exactly what they
needed to comer the Canadian market.
There was, however, no record of any of this in the Signal or the Globe.
The reason for that absence is probably that such a market sharing arrangement
it simply would not have made sense. It bears repetition that
was not made –
continued success for the Goderich salt men required the expansion of markets,
not their voluntary contraction. They could not have been satisfied with the
Canadian market alone –
it was too small for an unlimited salt basin. Much
more likely is that the statement in the Monetary Times was a fabrication, con-
cocted by a journalist or editor interested in ensuring that the salt interest did
not gain any more support in the Dominion Parliament. It is worth remembering
that the Montreal Board of Trade had petitioned the House of Commons to
remove the duty that had been placed on salt by the 1870 tariff.” That Board
surely had various allies among the nation’s leading newspapers.
A better explanation for the refusal of the salt men to merge is that a
merger, like a market sharing arrangement, would not have helped conquer new
markets. For greedy and self-interested capitalists whose sole interest was earn-
12 1In The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1977) at 133ff, Alfred D. Chandler, Jr. documented a sinilar market-sharing
agreement among railroad companies, the object of which was to ensure mutual profitability by
restricting the activities of each company to its “natural” market. Such a theory would probably
have been known to the Onondaga company. Interestingly, it was with regard to railway market-
sharing that Ontario Salt had its greatest success as a precedent. In his discussion of the Trans-
Missouri Freight Association case, Eddy, supra note 8 at 946-63, noted that Ontario Salt was cited
as authority for the maintenance of a voluntary association among a number of western railroads
by both the District Court (U.S. v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n, 53 F 440 (D. Kan. 1892)) and
the Circuit Court of Appeals (U.S. v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n, 58 F. 58 (8th Cir. 1893) [here-
inafter Trans-Missouri]). Like that of the Canadian Salt Association, the object was to control all
competitive traffic between or among its members so as to maintain just and reasonable rates. As
in Ontario Salt, the moral intent of the parties was determinative (see the discussion infra note
143ff) –
the courts decided that it could not be said that the public was injuriously affected by
the Association. In Trans-Missouri, the parties honestly intended only to “prevent unhealthy com-
petition and yet at the same time furnish the public with adequate facilities at fixed and reasonable
prices.” Their contract was designed to avert ruin, not to prevent “healthy competition,” which is
detrimental to the public. In Trans-Missouri just as in Ontario Salt, the public was not entitled to
free and unrestricted competition, but only to fair and healthy competition. Based upon pure stat-
utory interpretation, which purported to exclude the question of moral intent, the U. S. Supreme
Court reversed both judgments (U.S. v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n, 166 U.S. 290, 17 Sup. Ct.
540 (1896)).
122Supra note 97.
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THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
ing profits, merging would have been the appropriate solution. The advantage
of a merger is that, once it is large enough, the new organization acquires
monopoly powers and can control both price and production, enabling the
larger firm to ensure profitability, something that the Canadian Salt Associa-
tion failed to do. Profitability was probably not the sole objective of the Gode-
rich salt men. Had it been, they would likely have merged or at least attempted
to do so. That they did not is evidence that their objectives may have been
more community-oriented than the modem reader, typically trained to distrust
the motives of businessmen, would permit him or herself to think. It is entirely
possible that the Goderich salt men, who viewed themselves as members of
their community with a long-term interest in remaining members in good
standing, were just as interested in the successful development and continued
growth of that community’s resource as in lining their own pockets in the
shorter term.
If their interest was the more community-oriented one, the salt men’s only
real option was the formation of a cartel. Unfortunately, that cartel was unsta-
ble, and it fell apart. In October of 1871, the salt men sought a solution in
Ontario’s Court of Chancery.
VII. The Response of the Judiciary: The Courts Help Those Who Help
Themselves
In October of 1871, a mere four months after the cartel’s formation, the
Merchants Salt Co. attempted to withdraw from the Association. The Associ-
ation brought a Chancery suit, now known as the Ontario Salt case. 23 The bill
in that case was filed by the Ontario Salt Company, five other incorporated
companies, and several individuals against the Merchants Salt Company, also
a corporation. The bill sought to have the defendant restrained from acting in
contravention of covenants in an agreement made between the plaintiffs and
itself
to combine and amalgamate and unite under the name of the Canadian Salt Asso-
ciation for … mutual protection in the general management of salt operations, for
the purpose of selling on such terms as to secure as far as possible a fair share for
their capital invested in such operations, and generally for the purposes of com-
bined action and mutual protection in all matters relating to the manufacture and
sale of salt in Canada and elsewfiere.’ 24
The bill was demurred to for want of equity. Vice-Chancellor Strong
rejected the demurrer, disagreeing with Merchants’ two main arguments: that
the agreement was against public policy as tending to monopoly; and, that it was
void as an undue restraint on trade. On the first head, Strong stated that there
123Supra note 1. I have not been able to find much about the case itself. The Monetary Times
reported that the suit was brought (3 November 1871) but did not follow up on it. The Globe
reported on the arguments that were raised by counsel for each side, but followed it up with only
brief statements. The Signal merely reprinted the Globe’s report. No record of the case could be
found in the Public Archives of Ontario, and the law firm of Blake, Cassels and Graydon of
Toronto (whose early partner, Edward Blake, argued the case) was able to find nothing in its private
archives.
124Ontario Salt, ibid. at 541.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
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was no question of monopoly in these circumstances because the member com-
panies were not the only persons engaged in salt making in Ontario, and much
salt was imported.”z Because, according to Strong, the trade in salt would
“remain unaffected by the agreement, except in so far as prices may possibly be
influenced by it,” the essence of the defendant’s objection concerned not
monopoly, but engrossing.’26 Strong proceeded to discuss that common law
offence’ 27 and noted that it had been abolished by statute in England.2 s
Although he could find no similar legislation in Canada, he was sure that the
common law of engrossing did not apply, for it did not suit existing conditions
of trade and commerce:
I cannot suppose that a law which would strike at a vast number of transactions
which, with manifest benefit and profit to the community, are daily being entered
into without the least suspicion on the part of those engaged in them that they are
doing wrong, would now be applied as part of our common law.129
Thus, the Vice-Chancellor took judicial notice of exactly the state of affairs doc-
umented a century later by modem business historians like Michael Bliss and
Ben Forster, and thus altered the common law to accommodate that state of
affairs.
Strong defied legal formalism in not blindly or passively imposing estab-
lished common law precedents. Instead he found persuasive authority in doc-
trine from the United States and agreed with the idea that engrossing and the
kindred “offences” of forestalling and regrating were not only practised every
day, but were the very life of trade. 3 ‘ He concluded that “long usage” had
brought about a change in the common law and that, even if it could be said that
the object of the Canadian salt men was to raise the price of salt, their contract
would be neither illegal nor against public policy: “Were I to hold this agree-
ment void on any such ground, I should be laying down a rule which, if applied,
would cause great inconvenience in trade, and one, the necessity for which
12In response to an editorial by the Toronto Leader that the salt manufacturers were seeking to
establish their own monopoly, the Signal wrote:
It may be argued by our opponents that by urging for a duty on American salt coming
to Canada, we seek for the establishment of [an Onondaga-like] monopoly on a smaller
-scale. The thing is simply impossible from the highly important fact that we have a salt
territory that is known to extend from Kincardine to Seaforth –
nearly sixty miles,
with a width corresponding, all in private hands. Is it reasonable to think a Canadian
monopoly possible, when a new well may be sunk at almost any place along the line
we have indicated, and works established over a bed of solid salt 40 feet in thickness,
for $10,000?.Vhy does not not [sic] [the] same argument apply to the Syracuse com-
panies? Why, simply because they have neither the territory nor the quality of salt!
These simple truths set at rest forever the question of monopoly (Signal (25 May
1869)).
126Ontario Salt, supra note I at 542.
127He mentioned only R. v. Waddington, 1 East. 143, and, in stating that the common law was
“severely applied” in that case, showed that he was not ideologically bound by English precedents.
1287 & 8 Vict., c. 24. See generally, J.E. C6t6 “The Reception of English Law” (1977) 15 Alta.
L. Rev. 29.
129Ontario Salt, supra note 1 at 543.
130Particular reliance was placed by the Court upon W. Story, A Treatise on the Law of Sales of
Personal Property (Boston: C.C. Little & J. Brown, 1847) at 647.
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
would at this day be discountenanced by all public and scientific opinion. 13
The Merchants Salt Company’s first defence therefore failed.’32
Based as much on intuition and conjecture as it is on law, Ontario Salt is
a marvellous judgment, though it may be subject to criticism from the point of
view of a modem lawyer-economist.’33 Strong assumed, without apparent proof
or investigation, that the cartel in issue and others like it had the support of “all
public and scientific opinion.” And his statement that the agreement offered
“manifest benefit and profit to the community” also appeared to be presumed
rather than proved. As Jamie Benedickson has pointed out, Strong also confi-
dently and unquestioningly accepted “that business attitudes, as reflected in the
frequency and presumed innocence of similar arrangements, were grounds for
deciding the very question in dispute.”‘”
Another historian might view Ontario Salt in a different light, and what
follows is an attempt to describe one form of that view. It will first be necessary
to say a word about how Strong knew, intuitively and without investigation,
what was in the public interest. Following that brief discussion is a depiction of
what Vice-Chancellor Strong, as a man of his time, may have known and of the
kind of ideas that may have guided his decision.
The answer to the first question is, at once, pedestrian and unknowable.’35
Given the importance of the salt industry and the extent of its success in such
131 Ontario Salt, supra note 1 at 543.
’32Merchants’ second argument was that the covenant in issue was an unreasonable restraint of
trade. Strong began with a classic statement of the law, weU-established by that time: “Prinmfacie
every contract in restraint of trade is void; but if an agreement appears to be for a partial restraint
only, for valuable consideration and reasonable, the law sanctions it.” Strong found that the
restraint in Ontario Salt was only partial, and the mutual obligations constituted sufficient consid-
eration. As for reasonableness, Strong used the test from Homer v. Graves, 7 Bing. at 743 (Tindal
C.J.). As in that case, the issue in Ontario Salt was whether the agreement harmed the public inter-
est. Since he had already decided that public and scientific opinion favoured the Canadian salt car-
tel, any further discussion of public policy would have served no legitimate legal purpose (Ontario
Salt, ibid. at 546-47). Here, there was no submission to the will of a majority; all covenantees were
equal. Neither production nor sales of salt was restricted. All salt was to be sold through trustees
whose duty was to sell it in the interests of all, equally. Finally, Strong cited English authority,
Hearne v. Griffin, 2 Chitty’s Repts. 407 (Ellenborough L.J.), for the rule that a contract to charge
the same prices was not an improper restraint of trade. As in that case, the parties were left to
charge what they liked, though not less than each other –
“merely a convenient mode of arranging
two concerns which might otherwise ruin each other.”
133Compare Trebilcock and Benedickson, both supra note 3.
134Benedickson, ibid. at 12. Rather sceptically, Benedickson concluded that:
The Ontario Salt decision appears to rest on judicial confidence in the existence of a
shared community opinion that the public interest is essentially synonymous with the
interests and operations of private business. Accordingly, it demonstrated a great reluc-
tance to interfere in the realm of private business conduct, although it was ultimately
judicial confirmation that legitimized that conduct. However, not all judges of this era
viewed the formation of business associations with the same degree of equanimity, nor
with the same degree of reluctance to overturn private agreements.
1351t is unknowable because the only available record of counsel’s arguments was reported in the
Globe (26 October 1871). That report, which was reprinted in the Signal the next day, is summa-
rized below. The sketch in the Globe was extremely brief. Presumably, Blake’s arguments were full
of the kind of detail supplied by the Signal.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
a short period, it is unlikely that Strong would not have been aware of the dif-
ficulties created by the U.S. tariff and the waffling of the Canadian government
with regard to the imposition of a duty on salt. Even if he was not aware, or if
he read only the Globe and its anti-tariff columns, he was made aware of the
equities of the case by counsel for the plaintiff, Edward Blake, Q.C. Blake
pointed out that the object and effect of the association were not to restrain
trade, but “to meet the attempt of American manufacturers to crush Canadian
salt companies.” He argued that any injury inflicted on trade by the Association
had to be distinctly shown, but that this had not and could not be done. Blake
showed that the effect of the Canadian Salt Association could not be to create
a monopoly, for salt could be obtained over a square of forty miles, and a com-
paratively small portion of that deposit had been exploited. In addition, not all
Canadian salt companies had joined the CSA. U.S. salt entered Canada free of
duty, and a large quantity of salt was imported to Canada from England. Finally,
it was shown that the cartel agreement benefitted the public, because the CSA
appointed an inspector to guarantee the quality of its product, and because the
amalgamation lessened the cost of production.
That Strong did not rehearse those or other available arguments in his judg-
ment should come as no surprise. They were, after all, common knowledge.
Strong did not rely on intuition alone; that would not have been his style. At the
time of Ontario Salt, Strong was beginning what would ultimately be a long and
distinguished career in the Canadian judiciary.’36 Upon his appointment, the
Canada Law Journal stated that: “The new Vice-Chancellor has established a
reputation second to none as an equity counsel; and the Equity Bench, as well
as the Court of Appeal, will be greatly strengthened by the learning and talent
136There is no comprehensive biography of Sir Samuel Henry Strong. Because he did not die
until 1907, the Dictionary of Canadian Biography has not yet published its biographical sketch of
him. The Canadian Law Times and the Canada Law Journal wrote brief descriptions of him at var-
ious significant dates, namely at the time of his appointment to higher courts. The Canadian Green
Bag: An Entertaining Magazine for Lawyers, FL. Snow, ed., Vol.1, No.1 (1895) at 1 (John Lovell
& Son, Montreal), wrote a one-page summary of his career in its first volume. He is also mentioned
in: H.J. Morgan, ed., The Canadian Legal Directory: A Guide to the Bench and Bar of the Domin-
ion of Canada (Toronto: Carswell, 1878) at 259; J.G. Snell & F. Vaughan, The Supreme Court of
Canada: History of the Institution (Toronto: The Osgoode Society, 1985). M. Bade & E. Burstein,
“The Supreme Court of Canada 1892-1902: A Study of the Men and Their Times” (1970) 8
Osgoode Hall L. J. 503. It is on a combination of those sources that the following brief description
of Strong is based.
Strong was born in Dorsetshire, England, in 1825, the son of Rev. S.S. Strong, a former Rector
of Bytown. Educated in Canada, he was called to the Bar of Upper Canada in 1849. He was made
a Q.C. in 1863 and elected a Bencher of the Law Society of Upper Canada in 1860. He was a Com-
missioner for consolidating the Public General Statutes of Upper Canada and Canada, respectively
from 1856 to 1859 and a member of the Law Reform Commission of Ontario in 1871. He also
assisted Sir John A. MacDonald in the formation of the original Supreme Court, having written
the original draft of the Supreme Court Act. He was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the Ontario
Court of Chancery on 27 December 1869, where he remained until 27 May 1874, when he was
promoted to the Court of Error and Appeal for that Province. He was appointed a Puisne Judge
of the Supreme Court of Canada, on the organization of that court on October 8, 1875 (Morgan,
ed., ibid. at 259.). Strong was appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada in 1892,
a position lie retained until his retirement in 1902. In 1896, upon his appointment as a member of
the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, he became the Right Honourable Sir Samuel Henry
Strong (Snell & Vaughan, ibid.).
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
that he will add to them.” During Strong’s appointment ceremony at Osgoode
Hall, John Hillyard Cameron, the “talented and eloquent leader of the Bar of
Ontario,” ‘137 noted approvingly that the new Vice-Chancellor “was fresh from
the legal arena and its contests,” near to the profession, and aware of recent
occurrences.’38 In 1871, therefore, Strong would still have been fully cognizant
of what had been happening in legal circles. The Green Bag described him as
follows:
[He is] a man of great talent and learning, and a scientific lawyer, he is undoubt-
edly one of the best civil law jurists in Canada, and thoroughly familiar with the
French language… “as a lawyer pure and simple and in intellectual capacity he has
no superior on the bench.” … [His] judgments are models of judicial style: clear,
logical, and expressed in the purest and most correct English, they are deserving
of the closest study for their beauty of diction, their close reasoning, and profound
legal research.139
More importantly, the limited information available about Strong suggests
that he was not one to approach a question dogmatically or to let presupposi-
tions as to the primacy of such doctrines as freedom of contract determine in
advance the outcome of the cases over which he presided. 40
In Ontario Salt, Strong declared that the agreement in issue would not have
been illegal or against public policy even if its object had been solely to aug-
ment prices, a purpose that he denied. He subsequently affirmed that the real
object of the Association was not “unduly to enhance the price, but as it is
expressly alleged in the bill, to enable the parties by concerted action to combat
an attempt on the part of foreign producers and manufacturers unduly to depre-
ciate it.”. From Benedickson’s point of view, that was a tenuous assertion
offered by Strong because he was “not content” with his previously stated
“defences of the arrangements to increase salt prices.”’42 From Strong’s point of
view, however, the object of the Canadian Salt Association may have been com-
mon knowledge –
it certainly was so in Goderich. Since the problem with the
American monopoly had been the subject of major gatherings by manufacturers
and had resulted in the imposition of at least a temporary tariff that had, at the
time of the litigation, only recently been removed, it is entirely reasonable to
assume that the Vice-Chancellor had a strong foundation on which to base his
assertion about the object of the Canadian Salt Association.
Benedickson described Strong’s judgment as a “defence” of the combina-
tion and assumed, as a result, that it was indeed an arrangement to “increase salt
prices.” Implicit in that description is a kind of modernist condemnation of the
artificiality and injustice of the price rise. Yet, a common argument of the day
131(1875) 11 Can. L.J. 265.
1’1(1870) 6 Can. L.J. 4.
139 Canadian Green Bag, supra note 136 at 1.
140 That Strong was sensitive to the wants and habits of a new country and that that sensitivity.
was likely to find its way into many or most of his judgments, including Ontario Salt, must remain
hypotheses. Much more research would be required to determine whether an ideological thread can
be found running through his judgments. For present purposes, I have merely assumed that the
most positive hypotheses are true.
14’Ontario Salt, supra note 1 at 543-44.
142Benedickson, supra note 3 at 12.
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
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would have permitted the object and effect of the Canadian Salt Association to
be viewed from a more positive perspective. Derived as it was from the late-
nineteenth-century version of protectionism, an ideology with which Strong
would certainly have been familiar, if not sympathetic, the determination of the
fair price was often viewed as a moral issue rather than an economic one. 3 The
plaintiffs conceded two points: that the price was being raised; and, that the
price rise was artificial. The more important question was whether the price
increase was right or wrong, from a public perspective. That perspective has
been seen previously in this paper and was extremely common in 1870s
Ontario. It was expressed in the pages of the London Free Press, which called
for the judicious restoration of a fair price,'” and in the Signal’s response to
Goderich’s grumbling farmers. Its theme was the question of moral intent. 5
Popular notions like those were also translated into the judicial context, accord-
ing to Benedickson, who concluded that, prior to 1900, “emphasis on the par-
had … deflected attention from the sub-
ties’ purposes –
stantive impact of combination on consumers and trade competitors.’ 46
their moral intent –
Protectionists used a parallel argument in their pursuit of a broad national
tariff policy: “It is a common allegation with free-traders that protection makes
higher prices. But this is not correct, for the effect of that policy is simply to pre-
vent prices going lower than they should be.”’47
Because the price of salt did increase, so drastically and so immediately,
it is easy to condemn the participants in the combination as dissemblers who
1430ne is reminded here of the morality that underlay the crimes of engrossing, forestalling and
regrating, all of which were justified by notions of a fair price, where “fair” meant just, not effi-
cient. Douglas Hay has discussed a similar theme in his contextualization of R. v. Waddington,
supra note 127. In “The Criminal Prosecution in England and its Historians” (1984) 47 Mod. L.
Rev. 1, Hay responded to a doctrinal criticism of Waddington (and of a companion case, R. v. Rusby
(1800-1801), Peake Add. Cas. 189, 170 E.R. 241) by P.S. Atiyah (The Rise and Fall of Freedom
of Contract (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979) at 363-66). Atiyah’s commentary on those two cases
paralleled Trebilcock’s criticism of the cartel cases. For Hay, those cases illustrate the “value-
breeding, ideological functions of judges, and their sense of the policy requirements of the criminal
law.” Lord Kenyon described Waddington’s offence, engrossing large quantities of hops with the
hope of selling at an exorbitant profit, as a most heinous offence against religion and morality. In
Rusby, he wished “Dr. Adam Smith had lived-to hear the evidence of today, and then he would have
seen whether such an offence exists, and whether it is to be dreaded.” In the context of widespread
food riots, the courts exploited the engrossing laws as almost the only effective response to massive
riot. Waddington had “pressed on the court the wisdom of Adam Smith,” but the judges preferred
the “wisdom of the common law, and in their judgments used the rhetoric of Christianity and
humanity, rather than that of the market.” Hay insisted that the perspective of the judges was a per-
sonal one, imposed on their consciousness by events and circumstances that forced them to look
“beyond doctrine and beyond general curents of economic theory.” The same may be said of
Ontario Salt. In Waddington and Rusby, Hay stated, policy considerations based on a recognition
that, in late-eighteenth-century England, the labouring poor held a radically different view of what
was just and of the role of law than did Adam Smith. In Goderich of the 1870s, what was just and
equitable could not be determined solely by either (English) political economy or (English) juris-
prudence; it had to be determined by prevailing realities, social, political, and economic.
144Supra note 94.
t45See text accompanying supra note 31.
146B3enedickson, supra note 3 at 45.
147Conedy of Trade, supra note 75 at 8-9.
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
were all too prepared to disguise greed as love of country in a felonious attempt
to strip consumers of their surplus, or to accuse their supporters of being caught
in a contradiction or of bastardizing Adam Smith. 4 ‘ The world view that gave
rise to such apparent inconsistency can make sense. Ideology should not merely
be identified with formal philosophical systems. It reflects the tendency of peo-
ple to justify their actions in terms of a vision, however unarticulated, of how
the whole makes sense. Ideology is the over-arching structure within which par-
ticular arguments as to right and entitlement are rationalized, propounded, and
defended. In late-nineteenth-century Canada, it is arguable, based on the kinds
of statements made in the newspapers and in Parliament, an alternative hierar-
chy of values dominated the prevailing world view. In that hierarchy, property
came first, followed by liberty, and only then by equality. The ideal was prog-
ress, defined as the expansion of private property, and not market efficiency, per
se. 49 Seen in that light, the salt makers of Goderich were not merely rational
men acting practically, but members of a society in which they were leaders,
entitled to certain rights. They knew what was valuable and what needed fos-
tering to ensure a healthy community. The primary necessity in a nation that
wanted to progress was a healthy manufacturing sector. As Bliss has shown,
members of cartels were genuinely puzzled by claims that they were acting
unreasonably, for they regarded themselves as serving the public interest. Since
the alternative to a living profit was insolvency, consumers “must not expect the
trade of the Dominion to work for them for nothing.” “[P]rofits in business were
nothing more than the wages of businessmen,” a reward “justly” due to those
who provided the community with the services it required. Because competi-
tion, especially “unhealthy” competition could potentially prevent a business-
man from earning a living profit, and because such a result would deprive the
public of an obvious benefit, combination was “a necessary corollary” of indi-
vidualism. Businessmen had the right to ensure that “individual effort received
a decent reward.”’50
148Compare Trebilcock, supra note 3 at 15-17.
149See generally: F. Roy, Progrs, Humaniti, Liberti: le libiralisme de milieux d’affairesfran-
cophones de Montrial au tournant diu s kcle (Montreal: Boreal, 1988); L.S. Fallis, Jr., “The Idea
of Progress in the Province of Canada: A Study in the History of Ideas” in W.L. Morton, ed., The
Shield of Achilles: Aspects of Canada in the Victorian Age (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1968)
176.
150A Living Profit, supra note 64 at 45-46, 140-41, citing the Retail Merchants’ Journal of Canada
(20 October 1903), Le Prix Courant (8 May 1894). Bliss is to be commended for having portrayed
the world view of, “the cast of mind common among,” late-nineteenth-century businessmen in its
most positive light. He has reminded us of a basic distrust that modem readers have f’or the motives
of businessmen and instructed us to beware of the “assumption that a whole occupational group in
society is or was characterized by individuals guilt,’ of sins ranging from hypocrisy to immoral and
illegal behaviour.” Believing that businessmen, like most people, meant what they said, he recom-
mended a “mixed and complex picture of the relationship of business ideology and practice.” Part
of that ideology was the deeply entrenched belief that “business enterprise really was fundamental
to Canadian national development” and a belief “in fact in the myth of the businessman as social
benefactor” (ibid. at 135-43). Forster, Dales, Roy and Rutherford all appear to concur in Bliss’s con-
clusion. Without access to the letters of the Goderich salt men, I cannot be sure where they stood
in relation to that common cast of mind. Once again, I assume the most positive, because, in the
pages of the Signal, which often reads like a long, complicated morality play, there appeared no rea-
son to think otherwise, except with regard to Caesarea and the Vultures of Onondaga.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
Strong’s judgment in Ontario Salt was founded on a recognition of the
legitimacy of protectionist reasoning. The Vultures of Onondaga had acted
unduly to depreciate the price of salt, and Strong could see no reason that his
Court should deny Canadian salt makers the opportunity of battling such con-
temptible behaviour through the contractual formation of a cartel. As Benedick-
son has astutely pointed out, “Strong’s decision effectively amount[ed] to a judi-
cial tariff, a few years ahead of the National Policy.’ 5′
The National Policy was the expression of a protectionist world view.’52
And while Strong may have been a judge who was supposed to be in touch with
his common law roots, he was also a man of his time. “Since the organization,
deployment and dominant ideology of a legal profession typically develop in
lock-step and mingle inseparably with other local or intellectual trends,”’53 it
should not be surprising that Strong’s judgment in Ontario Salt was an expres-
sion of those trends. With the National Policy, Canada developed an indepen-
dence from the Motherland that was soon parallelled in its commercial courts.
Elizabeth Brown has documented a shift, in Ontario’s Court of Chancery, from
an old practice of slavishly following English precedent to one that attempted
to adapt the law to the needs of the province. 4 The original force behind that
change in thrust had been Chancellor William Hume Blake,’ who stated:
151Benedickson, supra note 3 at 12.
152See generally Forster, supra note 59; Dales, supra note 90. Forster noted that the wise reader
would maintain a healthy scepticism of this world view. Dales concluded that the National Policy
had actually harmed the Canadian economy, that its basic premises were simply wrong. Dales con-
demned the wilful blindness of historians and economists, himself included, who, for generations,
have defended the dream of Sir John A. MacDonald – whom Dales called “the first great Cana-
dian non-economist,” who gave us “our first lessons in the irrelevance of economics” (ibid. at 144).
What is interesting is that Dales criticized the historians and the economists, not the creators of
the National Policy (ibid. at 144-50). While concluding that they were wrong (ibid. at 154), he did
not condemn them, for the national policies they developed were consistent with their world view.
The protectionist ideology was an expression of how and what Canadian leaders thought in the
1870s. There may have been some dissembling – The Comedy of Trade proved that –
although
if they were guilty of anything, it would probably be more of profound irony –
simple ignorance
about how the nations they attempted to emulate had developed (see supra note 75) –
than of
intentional dissembling.
Dales’s discussion was important, for it showed that it is wrong to imply bad faith or stupidity
where, in reality, there may have been neither, simply because, in hindsight, one finds that they
were wrong, or one’s current ideology determines that they must have been wrong. Canadian lead-
ers of the 1870s may have been wrong, and, as Dales said, it may have been stupid, or at least log-
ically inconsistent, to attempt “to build a wealthy nation by lowering the standard of living of its
population” (ibid. at 148; see also, Comedy of Trade, ibid. at 12), but the real irony is that that
belief is still exceedingly popular. Canadians still believe, as part of their inferiority-determined
world view, that protection is necessary to the survival of their nation (Dales, ibid. at 143, 154).
The point is that, though there may be a right and a wrong, it is more likely that what is right in
the short term is wrong in the long term, and vice versa. It is, therefore, better not to judge, but
to give a fair hearing, at least to sympathize, if one is unable to empathize.
153Baker, supra note 9 at 227-29.
154See E. Brown, “Equitable Jurisdiction and the Court of Chancery in Upper Canada” (1983)
21 Osgoode Hall L. J. 275 at 299.
155Blake died just prior to Strong’s appointment to the Court. Indeed, Strong was appointed to
fill the vacancy created by his death. Blake’s Vice-Chancellor, John Godfrey Spragge, succeeded
Blake to the Chancellorship on the same day. Strong would often have pleaded in front of Blake
and would have appreciated what it was the latter was trying to accomplish (see supra note 138).
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
But were we to apply the rule to be deduced from some of the English cases which
were cited, especially some of the latter cases, upon the subject of delay, without
reference to the totally different social condition of this country, we should not
only produce great practical evil and injustice, but also, in my opinion, very much
misapply a doctrine which in England would never had been laid down under the
circumstances in which we are placed.15 6
Brown concluded that the Chancery judges “were even prepared to follow
American precedent if it reflected the needs of Upper Canada more accurately
than English precedent,” refusing to adopt English decisions if they seemed
inappropriate.’57 Arguably, that is what Strong did in Ontario Salt.’58 He used
American authority to overturn ancient English precedent. Ontario Salt was
among the first in a long line of restraint of trade cases that recognized impor-
tant differences between English and Canadian commercial policy. In discuss-
ing post-1889 statutory combines cases, Benedickson noted a tendency to
distance the statutory scheme from English common law restraint of trade princi-
ples. Repeated references to international trade suggest however that many judges
believed that Canada’s protective tariff policy sharply differentiated this country’s
domestic economic environment from that of England and that this difference pro-
vided the foundation for an independent Canadian position on the legal issues. 59
In Weidman v. Shragge, the Supreme Court of Canada said, with regard to the
law based on England’s leading restraint of trade case, Mogul Steamship: that
doctrine “may well be warranted in a country enjoying free trade. But we have
chosen an entirely different commercial system and must have regard
thereto.”‘” Vice-Chancellor Strong, in effectively establishing a judicial tariff in
Ontario Salt, founded his judgment on the same type of consideration, in the
context of a recent movement toward the development of a national trade and
tariff policy.
One other aspect of Benedickson’s analysis of Ontario Salt facilitates the
contextualization of that case. Benedickson emphasized Strong’s reluctance to
interfere in the realm of private business conduct, and concluded that it was his
judgment that legitimized that conduct, that gave public sanction to a private
1560’Keefe v. Taylor (1851), 2 Gr. 95 at 99.
157Brown, supra note 154 at 299.
15sIt is admittedly difficult to prove conclusively that a young and relatively inexperienced
Chancery judge would be guided by a spirit that held sway twenty years before. Since Strong was
a member of the tightly-knit Equity Bar of Upper Canada through the entire period that Blake dom-
inated the Chancery Court, it is not impossible that Strong would desire to emulate his most-
respected predecessor. Strong would also, of course, have been subject to contrary influences. As
Baker, supra note 9, has shown, the Ontario Bar was, beginning in this period, shifting toward a
more colonial jurisprudential perspective which permitted only the application of English prece-
dent. In the second part of Ontario Salt, Strong’s almost dogmatic reliance on English authority
permits one to hypothesize that Strong may have been on the cusp from the old approach to the
new. I assume that in Ontario Salt he was more the former than the latter, because he used the
English precedent to kill any further argument regarding public policy, to ensure that his sensitive,
community-based judgment would not be overturned by judgments from the Motherland.
159Benedickson, supra note 3 at 57-58.
160(1912), 46 S.C.R. 1, 2 D.L.R. 734 at 751; Mogul Steamship Co. v. McGregor, Gow & Co.
(1889), 23 Q.B.D. 598 (C.A.), aff’d [1892] A.C. 25, 61 L.J.Q.B. 295 (H.L.).
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
agreement. 61 Benedickson further implied that Strong viewed the formation of
business associations with equanimity.
Once again, Strong’s decision may be viewed from a different perspective.
Benedickson drew a sharp distinction between public and private spheres of
activity and presented them as being in conflict, not only in the case law, but
in reality. Benedickson seems troubled by Strong’s apparently unfounded
assumption that some “self-evident community consensus” could be “invoked
to legitimize” a patently private agreement designed to profit a few business-
men. 62 That a clear distinction did not yet exist in the mid-Victorian mind is a
state of affairs that has been oft-discussed.’63 There is no reason to believe that
Vice-Chancellor Strong perceived the world much differently.
A shared community opinion that the public interest was well-served by
the success of the salt industry clearly did exist in late-nineteenth-century
Ontario. The two were perhaps not synonymous, but they were undoubtedly
intertwined. It is important to remember, as Benedickson did, that the historical
relationship between Canadian governments and business had been understood
as cooperative rather than adversarial and that “public institutions were commit-
ted to the success of Canadian private enterprise.”‘”
In April of 1871, the
Dominion Parliament abandoned its duty on salt, thus decreeing that the
national public interest was not served by an incidental protective tariff that
benefitted only the relatively insignificant region of Goderich. But that aban-
donment should not be interpreted as a proclamation that the region should also
give up its attempts at development. Strong’s decision can be understood as a
further example of a public institution lending as much support as it could-to
Canadian enterprise: by standing back and letting the community fight its battle
with the Americans in any way it could.
It has been argued that letting a group of businessmen determine the public
interest is undemocratic. 6 1 That argument .amounts to an imposition of modem
notions of the relationship of governments and businessmen upon late-
161Benedickson, supra note 3 at 13.
1621bid. at 12, 47.
163See G.B. Baker, “Law Practice and Statecraft in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Montreal: The
Torrance-Morris Firm” in B. Wilton, ed., Beyond the Law: Lawyers and Businessmen in Canada,
1830-1930 (Toronto: Osgoode Society, 1990) 45; M.J. Horwitz, “The History of the Public-Private
Distinction” (1982) 130 U. Pa. L. R. 1423; J.H. Merryman, “The Public Law-Private Law Distinc-
tion in European and American Law” (1968) 17 J. Pub. L. 3.
164Benedickson, supra note 3 at 74-75. See generally H.G.J. Aitken, “Defensive Expansion: The
State and Economic Growth in Canada” in Easterbrook & Watkins, eds., supra note 6, 183; C.
Armstrong & H.V. Nelles, “Private Property in Peril: Ontario Businessmen and the Federal System,
1898-1911” in G. Porter &R.D. Cuff, eds., Enterprise and National Development: Essays in Cana-
dian Business and Economic History (Toronto: A.M. Hakkert, 1973) 20.
165See Dunlop, McQueen & Trebilcock, supra note 3 at 116-17:
However, even if national security considerations may sometimes have salience, it
seems highly problematic to delegate this judgment to self-interested members of an
industry and allow them to implement a cartel with this as the ostensible justification.
Democratically elected governments are, one would have supposed, the appropriate
institutions to make this judgment and to decide whether trade protection, subsidies or
state-sanctioned cartelization are the appropriate vehicle for securing this goal.
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
nineteenth-century enterprise. In the Huron County of 1871, businessmen and
elected leaders were often the same people. Perhaps it is due to limitations on
the electoral franchise, but those who employed both capital and labour tended
also to be the elected few. It was probably no coincidence that M.C. Cameron
was selected as a trustee of the Canadian Salt Association. Not only did he fully
support the salt industry, but he had contacts across the nation and could there-
fore spread the news. Samuel H. Detlor, M.P. Hays, and A.M. Ross, who were
either members or trustees of the Canadian Salt Association, may have been
businessmen and may have profited from the activities of the combination, but
they had also served as leaders of the Huron Rifles, the local military company,
in Goderich’s first battle against Americans: an 1866 invasion of the Fenians.
Why would anyone suspect that they would be any less diligent in their battle
with the vultures of Onondaga?166
It is noteworthy that later cases followed Ontario Salt in their concern
about the public conseqtiences of apparently private agreements. Benedickson
observed that in both R. v. Gage and R. v. Beckett, a case which applied Ontario
Salt, courts spoke confidently of the positive symbiosis between private and
public realms and recognized that “contractual and anti-competitive protection
of established business interests appear[ed] as sources of stability and order
which [were] of value to the public in an otherwise disruptive and uncertain
environment.” 67 Benedickson concluded:
at least in cases of this kind –
The decision is in effect an attempt to reunify –
the realm of public and private interest. These had apparently been separated by
interpretation of the Criminal Code in which the public interest was associated
with the consumer benefits of competition and efforts were made to identify an
independent or objective standard of reasonableness related to consequences or
substantive results. Private regulation of the market by a trade association like the
guild was presented as accomplishing the same ends that public regulation would
have sought. 168
Ontario Salt had exactly the same effect, although there could have been no
reunification of two concepts that had not yet been split.
166Memories of Goderich, supra note 11 at 51, described the battle with the Fenians as follows:
On March 6th, 1866, the call came from the Cabinet in Ottawa for 10,000 volunteers.
The Huron Rifles were out in a trice, ready to take the train to Stratford. Lieutenant
Hays closed his office at once although the editor [of the Signal, Mr. Cox] still insisted
there was no cause for alarm. Hundreds of citizens saw the soldiers off at the station
with Major A.M. Ross in command. At a special meeting in the town hall it was
decided to give 50 cents a day from the public purse to the volunteers who were heads
of families … Mayor Deflor handed out ammunition … The so-called General of the
Fenians was arrested and on June 12th Mr. Cox was able to declare that the farce was
almost over. He had very high praise for the “spirit of Huron and the general uprising
of loyal men which was instantaneous when danger threatened.”
Goderich was a tight-knit community, whose leaders were natural ones –
always the same people,
whether the problem was political, economic or military. In the Signal, the same names are
repeated issue after issue. Note 100, supra, outlines the positions of each of these men within the
CSA and in the community.
Benedickson, supra note 3 at 64.
’67R. v. Gage (No. 1) (1908), 13 C.C.C. 415 (Man. K.B.); R. v. Beckett, supra note 8. See also
16tBenedickson, ibid. at 70.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
Thus it is possible to conclude that, in terms of Canadian restraint of trade
law as it ultimately developed, Vice-Chancellor Strong was prescient. His judi-
cial tariff preceded the imposition of a national tariff policy by several years. He
also recognized, without needing to since it was self-evident, that public was
private, that private was public, and that each had to support the other if the
nation were to progress.
Having succeeded on the demurrer, Ontario Salt et al. then sued for an
injunction to restrain the sale of salt contrary to the terms of the Canadian Salt
Association’s agreement. On 15 November 1871, Chancellor John Godfrey
Spragge, based on the reasons for judgment of Vice-Chancellor Strong, held that
“the plaintiffs are entitled to an injunction, and that this is not a case in which
the balance of convenience is in favor of leaving the defendants to conduct a
separate, independent business, in contravention of articles of association to
which they became parties.” 69
The Globe reported, without commentary, on the second decision, but the
Signal did not cover it.’ 70 The Signal had stated that Strong’s judgment would
“be fraught with consequences for the Seaforth Company, as [it would] no doubt
be responsible for all loss to the Association, through lower prices and loss of
business resulting from their action.”7 There is no record of such payments
being enforced. After its report on the judgment of the Chancery Court, neither
the Signal nor the Globe spoke of the Canadian Salt Association. The Monetary
Times mentioned only its demise:
Since the Salt Association was dissolved, the price of salt has gone down to a price
which fails to yield any profit to the producer. We have frequently spoken of the
baneful effects of excessive competition, and we think those localities which have
been unsuccessful in their search after this now abundant material have very little
reason to regret. So long as our producers have only the limited market of Ontario
to depend upon, some limit must be placed upon the production if the business is
to be conducted profitably. The present number of wells are capable of yielding
brine enough to supply the whole Dominion with salt. The increasing price of
wood, which is principally used for fuel in the process of evaporation, continually
adds to the cost of manufacture: in some instances where the refuse of saw mills
and tanneries is used, the expense is so much reduced that it will be difficult for
the owners of wells not possessed of these advantages to compete, or to be suc-
cessful in any attempt to force up the prices. 72
Not only was the Association defunct, but various manufacturers continued to
find ways to undercut their fellow Canadians. The Canadian salt industry was
moribund. Its boom had been extremely short-lived. In his 1876 deposition
before the House of Commons Committee on the Salt Interest, one Grey of Sea-
forth testified that the salt industry had been profitable from 1866 to 1870 and
in 1873. In the former years, he said, the demand exceeded supply. In 1873, a
rise in the price of coal in England forced up the price of salt worldwide,
enabling Canadian salt manufacturers to profit. 73
169Ontario Salt Company v. Merchants Salt Company (1871), 18 Gr. 551 at 556.
170″Legal Intelligence” The [Toronto] Daily Globe (16 November 1871) 4.
171″The Salt Amalgamation” Signal (31 October 1871) 2.
172Monetary Times (9 February 1872) 632.
173″Select Committee,” supra note 22.
1993]
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
By 1879, Seaforth and Clinton, whose fuel supplies remained inexpensive,
“paralyzed the entire trade and crippled the prosperity of the county town [Gode-
rich], to the corresponding benefit of its more lucky rival.” In that same year, only
four of the Goderich works remained in operation. Two of those works had
achieved relative success thanks to a large flour mill that began operations in the
mid-1870s. The mill was powered by steam, and the exhaust steam was utilized,
instead of wood, in the evaporation of brine. Both cheap and convenient, this
evaporation method ensured that Goderich was able to supply the Chicago and
Milwaukee markets. All markets to the east, including the entire Canadian mar-
ket, were supplied by the salt manufacturers of Seaforth and Clinton. 74
The cartel was a last resort for the salt men of Goderich. They had tried
every other legitimate means to gain competitive advantage over their American
competitors, but to no avail. Finally, they tried to get the state to enforce their
cartel, their attempt to gain artificially that which they felt belonged to them in
equity: a living profit. They failed. Ontario’s Chancery Court gave the salt men
what it could, namely the right to protect and promote the interests of their com-
munity by combining and forcing up prices. But that combination resulted only
in a further expansion of an already over-developed industry. What was required
was an expansion of the market for Canadian salt, something that was beyond
the reach of Vice-Chancellor Strong. It may also have been beyond the reach of
the Dominion Parliament. While it was true that the imposition of a Canadian
import duty on salt would have had the effect of expanding the Canadian mar-
ket, an industry with a productive potential as vast as that of the Goderich region
required a much larger market. Only free trade with the Americans would have
offered a market of a size that would have permitted the continued expansion
of the Canadian salt industry.
Conclusion
I wish my object had been to bolster Canadian national pride by the pow-
erful rendering of a tale involving the successes and failures of creative, intel-
ligent and industrious pioneers armed vith good intentions and good faith. I
now believe that it is such a story, but my intention was not that it come out that
way. It just happened.’75 Douglas Hay has stated that it is essential, when elu-
cidating a series of cases, to reconstruct not only the doctrinal history and intel-
lectual movements, but also the larger histories of actual litigation and the wider
social context. “Only then will we illuminate the policy considerations and prej-
udices which are referred to so fleetingly in the reported cases, if at all, and be
able to judge the relative autonomy of doctrine from economic theories, class
strategies, and imperatives of government.1 76
In the present paper, I have tried, for a single case, to follow Hay’s
advice 77. Some of the policy considerations and prejudices to which Hay*
174See generally Historical Atlas, supra note 16 at 8-10.
175That it did was at least partially foreseeable, of course, since I undertook no primary research
on the Onondaga Company or the New York salt industry. Virtually the entire story was told from
the viewpoint of the most partisan of spectators –
the local newspaper.
176Hay, supra note 143 at 13.
177There are other ways to tell the story of Ontario Salt. The first time I read about it was in
McGILL LAW JOURNAL
[Vol. 38
referred have been exposed in the contextualization of Ontario Salt. In Goderich
during the late 1860s and early 1870s was a group of businessmen who exem-
plified the business ethos of many other Canadian entrepreneurs. With their
world view clouded by the ideological primacy of progress and growth, the salt
men of Goderich rode the rising tide of protectionism and learned to exploit a
burgeoning Canadian nationalism for the benefit of the community and for their
own profit. In so doing, they united the local population and sought to lead that
community to greater and greater prosperity. Knowing that self-reliance and
independence of spirit were not in themselves sufficient, they sought the back-
ing of the Dominion. Unfortunately, they failed to convince the rest of the
Dominion that the prosperity of Goderich was in the national interest. When, as
a last resort, Goderich looked to Ontario’s Court of Chancery for assistance,
they found it in a sympathetic Vice-Chancellor Strong who judicially subsidized
the community’s salt project. He viewed as self-evident and genuine the objects
and purposes of the Canadian Salt Association and knew that the community
was being properly served by the salt combination. Strong did employ a “sim-
plified and popularized version” of political economy, but it was neither a mis-
application of Ricardo (for Ricardo simply was not that significant in late-
nineteenth-century Canadian political economy) nor defined by rising industrial
interests. The version of political economy Strong applied in Ontario Salt was
the emerging protectionism of non-economist Canadians who did not distin-
guish between industrial and consumer interests. For them, the public interest
was also the private, and it had not yet been uniquely identified with the con-
sumer.
It could be argued that, had it been properly applied by Canadian courts,
the law could have significantly enhanced consumer efficiency (consumer wel-
fare) by discouraging the maintenance of bare cartels.”‘8 Though the present
paper is the history of just one case, it seems possible to conclude that the law,
understood here as judge-made law, could have done nothing of the sort. In
Michael Trebilcock’s The Common Law of Restraint of Trade (supra note 3). Trebilcock’s concern
was the application of restraint of trade doctrine to cartels. For him, legal history is determined by
intellectual history, and his history was written to serve the presentist concerns of neo-classical
economists. Trebilcock treated Ontario Salt as one of many in a doctrinal line of cases that misused
and misconstrued the liberalism and political utilitarianism of David Ricardo and John Stuart Mill.
Within Trebilcock’s economic framework, the common law cases, including Ontario Salt, were
“straightforwardly objectionable.”He concluded that Strong, like other judges of his time, misap-
plied Ricardo’s ideas, because he employed a version of them that was “simplified and popularized
by the rising industrial interests of the period.” Courts misinterpreted and misapplied restraint of
trade doctrine because judges were overly dogmatic in blindly imposing a caricature of true lib-
eralism. He condemned them for permitting doctrine to develop that generally enforced cartel
agreements at the expense of third parties and of the consuming public. The common law and its
judges failed to control behaviour that should have been banned, for the good of all. For Trebil-
cock, the common law cartel cases were “an immutable and somewhat embarrassing historical leg-
acy of the common law’s failure to address an important private abuse of economic power and an
abdication of the more exalted role which it had begun to define for itself in the mercantilist era
and which it has to some extent managed to recapture in other areas of the restraint of trade doc-
trine in the modem era.” Strong was one of those embarrassing judges, and the Goderich salt men
abused private economic power at the expense of consumers.
78Compare Trebilcock, ibid. at 299.
19931
THE SALT MEN OF GODERICH
Ontario Salt, it could have done only one of two things: enforced the cartel or
dissolved it. Neither action would have made any great difference to the pros-
pects of the salt industry or the maintenance of cartels. The former was deter-
mined almost entirely by decisions made elsewhere, namely in Ottawa, London
and-Washington. The creation of cartels was the result, not of promotion or
legitimation by courts, but of a developing protectionist world view that enabled
contemporaries to determine a fair price based on moral right to the exclusion
of market efficiency. It was not judicial confirmation that legitimized the cartel-
izing conduct of private businessmen in late-nineteenth-century Canada. That
conduct was the natural consequence of the conjunction of circumstances that
constituted the essence of the desire in late-nineteenth-century Canada for social
harmony. That harmony-was consciously pursued by all public institutions, and
Strong’s judgment in Ontario Salt merely confirmed an already well-entrenched
commitment by public institutions to support the development of the nation.
That was one of law’s roles in that context.
Michael Bliss has remarked that our impression of late-nineteenth-century
business and the consequences of competition would not be complete until more
work had been undertaken on Canada’s business failures, “the staple of every
trade journal and the spectre haunting every businessman hoping to succeed.”’79
The story of the Goderich salt men and Ontario Salt may be one of those fail-
ures. The only mistake would be to consider the industry, the salt men or
Strong’s judgment a failure. The error is in judging: good or bad, right or wrong,
success or failure. Judges judge, because they have to. Historians tell stories.
Their stories have terminated and their actors have disappeared, never to return.
The historian brings them back to life, but only for our entertainment and, per-
haps, enlightenment and inspiration. In describing “the life of yesterday in the
present,” there is no need for judgment, only good reporting.
Appendix
The diagram on the following page clearly illustrates the decline in the
price of salt and the inability of the salt cartel to prohibit that decline.
The increase beginning at No. 14 (13 October 1870) is seasonal in nature.
Until that time the price remained reasonably stable, reflecting the time required
for most new entry into the market to occur. The price starts to fall at the begin-
ning of 1871. This is likely in response to successful completion of the majority
of the Goderich wells. It also may have something to do with dumping by the
Americans, though this is not reflected in the American price.
The jump in price at No. 24 (6 July 1871) is the increase that was artifi-
cially imposed by the Canadian Salt Association, which had been formed the
week before, on 29 June 1871. The final rise in price at No. 39 (17 June 1872)
was a response to the fifty per cent reduction of the U.S. tariff on salt.
179A Living Profit, supra note 64 at 139-40.
REVUE DE DROIT DE McGILL
[Vol. 38
APPENDIX: Salt Prices on the Toronto Market, 1867-1872
Price per Barrel of:
Date
Goderich Salt
American Salt
15 Jul 1867
15 JuI1868
29 Oct 1868
21 Jan 1869
08 Apr 1869
17 Feb 1870
18 Mar 1870
21 Apr 1870
19 May 1870
16 Jun 1870
07 Jul 1870
11 Aug 1870
01 Sep 1870
13 Oct 1870
17 Nov 1870
15 Dec 1870
30 Jan 1871
20 Feb 1871
09 Mar 1871
20 Apr 1871
15 May 1871
15 Jun 1871
29 Jun 1871
06 Jul 1871
17 Aug 1871
21 Sep 1871
26 Oct 1871
23 Nov 1871
14 Dec 1871
28 Dec 1871
18 Jan 1872
25 Jan 1872
08 Feb 1872
15 Feb 1872
26 Feb 1872
18 Mar 1872
25 Apr 1872
16 May 1872
17 Jun 1872
none
none
1.45
1.60
1.60
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.65
1.65
1.65
1.58
1.58
1.43
1.35
1.35
1.25
1.23
1.55
1.55
1.48
1.48
1.35
1.35
1.28
1.28
1.23
1.15
1.18
1.15
1.18
1.10
1.18
1.27
1.80″
1.60
1.60
1.35
1.50
1.35
1.35
1.35
1.35
0.00
0.00
0.00
1.75
1.75
1.85
1.85
1.85
1.85
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
No.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
8
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
These numbers were taken
from the Weekly Market Report
in the Globe. It was usually print-
ed on Thursdays. When it was
not, I used the business report of
any other weekday that included
the price for salt.
Before October 1868, Goder-
ich salt was probably available
on the Toronto market but was
not yet of sufficient importance
to justify giving it space in the
Market Report. At that time, Am-
erican salt was priced high. The
introduction of Goderich salt suc-
ceeded in immediately reducing
the price of American salt (from
$1.80 to $1.60/bbl).
The low prices for American
salt in 1869 and in early 1870
may attest to the attempts by the
Americans to undersell the God-
erich salt manufacturers. The
Americans then dropped out of
the market during Goderich’s
high season (Summer, 1870).
The Americans returned to the
Wmter market with high prices.
This does not accord with the
story told by C.T. Hurrell to the
House of Commons. He claimed
that the Americans dumped tons
of salt on the market, thereby for-
cing the Goderich works out of
business and the salt workers into
unemployment and starvation. It
appears that the Goderich salt
price actually increased. The fall
in price of Goderich salt at the
same time may be a reflection of
this dumping.
No explanation was found for
the disappearance of American
salt from the Toronto market af-
ter February, 1871. The Globe
stopped reporting the price, but it
is hard to believe that Goderich
captured the whole market.