Date: 20110224
Docket: T-1054-10
Citation:
2011 FC 217
[UNREVISED
ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Montréal,
Quebec, February 24, 2011
PRESENT: Mr. Richard Morneau, Prothonotary
ADMIRALTY ACTION IN REM AND IN PERSONAM
BETWEEN:
|
SHELL CANADA ENERGY
and
VATANA
PHAISAL ENGINEERING
CO. LTD.
and
BOUSTEAD
INTERNATIONAL
HEATERS
LTD.
|
|
|
Plaintiffs
|
and
|
|
GENERAL
MPP CARRIERS
and
U‑SHIP
MARITIME SERVICES INC.
and
THE SHIP
“SCL THUN”
and
THE
OWNERS AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED IN THE SHIP “SCL THUN”
and
THE SHIP
“WISDOM”
and
THE
OWNERS AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED IN THE SHIP “WISDOM”
|
|
|
Defendants
|
|
|
|
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
There are two motions in the case at bar.
[2]
The first motion filed in the Court record is a motion by Wisdom
GmbH and Co. KG (hereinafter Wisdom GmbH) under Rules 399, 477
and 479 of the Federal Courts Rules (the Rules) (the motion by
Wisdom GmbH).
[3]
Wisdom GmbH is the owner of the ship “Wisdom” (the Ship
Wisdom). In short, in its motion, Wisdom GmbH is challenging the service of the
amended statement of claim against it effected on or about September 22, 2010,
and asking that it be set aside. In its motion Wisdom GmbH is also asking that
the order of this Court, dated September 13, 2010, be set aside. That order
was the basis on which the plaintiffs had relied to effect service on
September 22, 2010.
[4]
The style of cause used by the Plaintiffs and Rule 477
form the basis of the challenge by Wisdom GmbH.
[5]
In their reply record to this motion, the plaintiffs are
seeking the dismissal of this motion and, alternatively, are asking the Court
to consider any error on their part in the style of cause to be an irregularity
within the meaning of Rules 56 et seq., and are asking that this
irregularity be addressed by way of Rule 59(b).
[6]
The second motion was brought by the plaintiffs. In fact,
following the motion brought by Wisdom GmbH, the plaintiffs brought a motion under
Rules 75 to 77. Aside from the fact that it refers to different rules,
the motion brought by the plaintiffs (the plaintiffs’ motion to amend)
essentially relies on the same position they asserted in their reply record to
the motion brought by Wisdom GmbH.
[7]
A reply record to this motion was submitted by Wisdom GmbH.
In that reply record, Wisdom GmbH referred to and included the transcript of
the examination of one of the counsel for the plaintiffs who essentially swore
an affidavit supporting the plaintiffs’ position in response to the motion
brought by Wisdom GmbH or in support of the plaintiffs’ motion to amend (the affidavit
or cross-examination of Mr. Ross).
Facts
[8]
It appears that on June 30, 2010, namely, the last day
within the one-year limitation period, the plaintiffs brought an action following
alleged damages to a cargo of goods during maritime transport.
[9]
The style of cause used by the plaintiffs at the time was:
ADMIRALTY ACTION IN REM AND IN PERSONAM
BETWEEN:
SHELL CANADA ENERGY
and
VATANA
PHAISAL ENGINEERING CO. LTD.
and
BOUSTEAD INTERNATIONAL
HEATERS LTD.
Plaintiffs
and
GENERAL MPP
CARRIERS
and
U‑SHIP
MARITIME SERVICES INC.
and
THE SHIP
“SCL THUN”
and
THE OWNERS
AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED
IN THE SHIP
“SCL THUN”
and
THE SHIP
“WISDOM”
and
THE OWNERS
AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED
IN THE SHIP “WISDOM”
Defendants
[10]
On August 27, 2010, the defendants General MPP Carriers
and U‑Ship Maritime Services Inc. were served with an amended statement
of claim dated August 26, 2010 (the amended statement of claim). On the
same day, the plaintiffs faxed a copy of this amended statement of claim to Wisdom
GmbH in Germany.
[11]
A few days later, on August 30, 2010, an original copy
of this amended statement of claim was sent by courier to Wisdom GmbH in Germany. It was received on September 1, 2010.
[12]
However, given that, in principle, the personal service of
the amended statement of claim on Wisdom GmbH in Germany had to be carried out
in accordance with the Hague Convention, the plaintiffs filed an ex parte
written motion, dated September 8, 2010, seeking an extension of time to
serve the amended statement of claim.
[13]
By order dated September 13, 2010 (the order dated
September 13, 2010), the Court granted the extension:
ORDER
CONSIDERING the motion of the plaintiffs to extend
the delays to serve proceedings on the defendant, the owners of the Ship
“Wisdom”, Wisdom GmbH and Co. KG;
AFTER having heard the plaintiffs’ representations;
THE COURT ORDERS AS
FOLLOWS:
1.
GRANTS the present motion;
2.
EXTENDS the delay to serve proceedings on the owners of the Ship
“Wisdom” by three (3) months from the date of the present Order;
3.
THE WHOLE WITHOUT COSTS.
[14]
On September 22, 2010, Wisdom GmbH was served the
amended statement of claim in Germany.
[15]
On December 1, 2010, Wisdom GmbH filed its motion.
Analysis
[16]
Rule 477 reads as follows:
477. (1)
Admiralty actions may be in rem or in personam, or both.
(2) The
style of cause of an action in rem shall be in Form 477.
(3) The
style of cause of an action in personam shall be as provided for in
subsection 67(2).
(4) In an action in rem,
a plaintiff shall include as a defendant the owners and all others interested
in the subject-matter of the action.
|
477. (1) Les
actions en matière d’amirauté peuvent être réelles ou personnelles, ou les
deux à la fois.
(2) L’intitulé d’une
action réelle est libellé selon la formule 477.
(3) L’intitulé d’une
action personnelle est le même que celui prévu au paragraphe 67(2).
(4) Dans une action
réelle, le demandeur est tenu de désigner à titre de défendeurs les
propriétaires du bien en cause dans l’action et toutes les autres personnes
ayant un intérêt dans celui-ci.
|
[17]
It is clear from Rule 477, particularly
subsections 477(2) and (4), as well as from Form 477, that
Wisdom GmbH is right when it claims the wording in the following style of cause
could only, on the last day of the limitation period (on June 30, 2010), have instituted
an in rem action against the Ship Wisdom and not an in personam action
against Wisdom GmbH:
THE SHIP
“WISDOM”
and
THE OWNERS
AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED
IN THE SHIP “WISDOM”
[18]
With regard to the order dated September 13, 2010, at
paragraph 6 of its notice of motion, Wisdom GmbH argued the following:
6. In the present
instance, the ex parte Order [the order dated September 13, 2010]
which purportedly was to allow for the extension of service of the Amended
Statement of Claim as if there existed an action in personam against the
Wisdom GmbH & Co. KG was improperly granted as the form of service provided
therein, i.e. personal service on Owners in Bremen Germany, is not permitted by
the Rules for an action purely in rem.
[19]
It should be noted in passing, and inasmuch as the following
aspect has been or continues to remain at issue between entities involved, that
the service effected on September 22, 2010, cannot be considered as having
been validly effected on the Ship Wisdom since the ship was not in Canada at
that time.
[20]
As to the existence of an in personam action against
Wisdom GmbH, the plaintiffs argued by way of Mr. Ross’s affidavit that they had
always intended to view and to treat Wisdom GmbH as a personal defendant in the
matter.
[21]
It seems to me from the outset that even if we were to
grant that the plaintiffs’ intention is pertinent, the intention to institute
an action against Wisdom GmbH must be limited and assessed as of the last day
of the limitation period, namely, June 30, 2010, the date on which the
statement of claim was filed.
[22]
It appears that Mr. Ross became involved in the matter
at a later date, namely, once the statement of claim had been issued.
[23]
Furthermore, what Mr. Ross’ cross-examination principally
revealed was that the intention to institute an in personam action
against Wisdom GmbH on June 30, 2010, was possibly a matter of concern for
the plaintiffs that had not been disclosed directly to Mr. Ross. His
version on this point constitutes hearsay and must be assigned little weight
here. Furthermore, no affidavit from the plaintiffs themselves was produced.
[24]
Moreover, on June 30, 2010, and as was stated by
Wisdom GmbH at paragraphs 22 and 23 of its written representations in
its reply record to the plaintiffs’ motion to amend (and reproduced below), the
wording of the amended statement of claim makes no reference to Wisdom GmbH. On
the contrary, ownership of the Ship Wisdom seems to be attributed to the
personal defendants correctly named under Rule 67 in the style of cause:
22.
(…) the only connection between Wisdom GmbH & Co. KG and the
Plaintiffs established in the Statement of Claim is the allegation of carriage
by the ship “Wisdom” of the allegedly damaged cargo in question. There is no
mention whatsoever of Wisdom GmbH & Co. KG, nor of any specific fault alleged
in personam, nor of any other detail which would connect Wisdom GmbH
& Co. KG to the Plaintiffs, aside from the ownership of the vessel.
23.
Third, and most tellingly, paragraph 4 of the Statement of Claim,
Plaintiffs allege as follows:
“At all material times herein, General MPP Carriers and U‑Ship
Maritime Services Inc. were the owners, operators, man[a]gers
and/or charterers of the M.V. “SCL THUN” and M.V. “WISDOM” respectively.”
[Emphasis added]
● Statement of Claim, para. 4
[25]
When all is said and done, on June 30, 2010, it seems
reasonable to me to concur with what Wisdom GmbH stated at paragraph 31 of
its written representations against the amendment.
31.
Accordingly, there is simply no evidence before the Court to suggest that
Plaintiffs intended to properly institute an in personam action against
Wisdom GmbH & Co. KG. The Plaintiffs therefore intended to, and did in
fact, properly institute an in rem action, and only an in rem
action against the ship “Wisdom”, in addition to an action in personam
against General MPP Carriers and U-Ships Maritime Services Inc.
[26]
The fact that the style of cause above makes reference to
the fact that the action was both in rem and in personam does not
enhance the situation in favour of the plaintiffs’ argument.
[27]
Accordingly, subsequent actions taken by the plaintiffs
when they made various attempts to send the amended statement of claim to
Wisdom GmbH at the end of August 2010 cannot salvage the situation.
[28]
The same applies for the order dated September 13,
2010. When it issued the order, the Court could not directly or indirectly
create a right of in personam action against Wisdom GmbH.
[29]
This is not a question of allowing the plaintiffs to correct
a misnomer or irregularity in the style of cause. I cannot allow the plaintiffs
to resort to Rules 56 et seq. to try to address the situation.
[30]
Ultimately, as Wisdom GmbH noted at paragraph 21 of its
written representations against the amendment:
21.
To accept Plaintiffs’ position would necessarily lead to the conclusion
that any time a party follows the nomenclature “Owners and all others
interested in the Ship (Name)”, it is actually instituting both an
action in rem and in personam. It is respectfully submitted that
this position is untenable both by the inherent difference between such
actions, and by way of the specific wording of Rule 477.
[31]
Rule 399 reads as follows:
399. (1) On
motion, the Court may set aside or vary an order that was made
(a)
ex parte; or
(b) in the
absence of a party who failed to appear by accident or mistake or by reason
of insufficient notice of the proceeding,
if the party against
whom the order is made discloses a prima facie case why the order
should not have been made.
(2) On
motion, the Court may set aside or vary an order
(a) by reason of a matter that
arose or was discovered subsequent to the making of the order; or
(b)
where the order was obtained by fraud.
(3) Unless the Court
orders otherwise, the setting aside or variance of an order under subsection
(1) or (2) does not affect the validity or character of anything done or not
done before the order was set aside or varied.
|
399. (1) La
Cour peut, sur requête, annuler ou modifier l’une des ordonnances suivantes,
si la partie contre laquelle elle a été rendue présente une preuve prima
facie démontrant pourquoi elle n’aurait pas dû être rendue :
a) toute
ordonnance rendue sur requête ex parte;
b) toute
ordonnance rendue en l’absence d’une partie qui n’a pas comparu par suite
d’un événement fortuit ou d’une erreur ou à cause d’un avis insuffisant de
l’instance.
(2) La
Cour peut, sur requête, annuler ou modifier une ordonnance dans l’un ou
l’autre des cas suivants :
a) des
faits nouveaux sont survenus ou ont été découverts après que l’ordonnance a
été rendue;
b)
l’ordonnance a été obtenue par fraude.
(3) Sauf ordonnance
contraire de la Cour, l’annulation ou la modification d’une ordonnance en
vertu des paragraphes (1) ou (2) ne porte pas atteinte à la validité ou à la
nature des actes ou omissions antérieurs à cette annulation ou modification.
|
[32]
In these circumstances, I do not find the motion by Wisdom
GmbH under this rule to be late.
[33]
Thus, for the foregoing reasons, there is reason to
consider that Wisdom GmbH disclosed, within the meaning of subsection 399(1)
of the Rules, a prima facie case why the order dated September 13,
2010, should not have been made.
[34]
Accordingly, the motion by Wisdom GmbH will be allowed with
costs, which the Court will set at $2,000, and the order dated
September 13, 2010, will be set aside and the service of the amended
statement of claim effected on or about September 22, 2010, will also be
set aside. All of the remedies sought by the plaintiffs in their reply record
to this motion will be dismissed.
[35]
As for the plaintiffs’ motion to amend, it relies on
Rules 75 to 77. These rules read as follows:
75. (1)
Subject to subsection (2) and rule 76, the Court may, on motion, at any time,
allow a party to amend a document, on such terms as will protect the rights
of all parties.
(2) No
amendment shall be allowed under subsection (1) during or after a hearing
unless
(a)
the purpose is to make the document accord with the issues at the hearing;
(b)
a new hearing is ordered; or
(c) the other
parties are given an opportunity for any preparation necessary to meet any
new or amended allegations.
76. With
leave of the Court, an amendment may be made
(a) to
correct the name of a party, if the Court is satisfied that the mistake
sought to be corrected was not such as to cause a reasonable doubt as to the identity
of the party, or
(b) to alter
the capacity in which a party is bringing a proceeding, if the party could
have commenced the proceeding in its altered capacity at the date of
commencement of the proceeding, unless to do so would result in prejudice to
a party that would not be compensable by costs or an adjournment.
77. The Court
may allow an amendment under rule 76 notwithstanding the expiration of a
relevant period of limitation that had not expired at the date of
commencement of the proceeding.
|
75. (1) Sous
réserve du paragraphe (2) et de la règle 76, la Cour peut à tout moment, sur
requête, autoriser une partie à modifier un document, aux conditions qui
permettent de protéger les droits de toutes les parties.
(2)
L’autorisation visée au paragraphe (1) ne peut être accordée pendant ou après
une audience que si, selon le cas :
a) l’objet
de la modification est de faire concorder le document avec les questions en
litige à l’audience;
b) une
nouvelle audience est ordonnée;
c) les
autres parties se voient accorder l’occasion de prendre les mesures
préparatoires nécessaires pour donner suite aux prétentions nouvelles ou
révisées.
76. Un
document peut être modifié pour l’un des motifs suivants avec l’autorisation
de la Cour, sauf lorsqu’il en résulterait un préjudice à une partie qui ne
pourrait être réparé au moyen de dépens ou par un ajournement :
a)
corriger le nom d’une partie, si la Cour est convaincue qu’il s’agit d’une
erreur qui ne jette pas un doute raisonnable sur l’identité de la partie;
b) changer
la qualité en laquelle la partie introduit l’instance, dans le cas où elle
aurait pu introduire l’instance en cette nouvelle qualité à la date du début
de celle-ci.
77. La Cour
peut autoriser une modification en vertu de la règle 76 même si le délai de
prescription est expiré, pourvu qu’il ne l’ait pas été à la date du début de
l’instance.
|
[36]
All things considered, I am of the opinion that this motion
should be assessed more specifically on the basis of Rules 76(a)
and 77.
[37]
In this case, for the foregoing reasons, I cannot accept
that the plaintiffs’ motion is merely about the correction of a name or the
correction of a mere technicality. In this case it involves adding a party to
the action, namely, a personal defendant, after the limitation period had expired.
To allow such an addition would cause irreparable harm to Wisdom GmbH.
[38]
It appears to me that the matter under review must follow
this Court’s reasoning at paragraphs [8] to [16], and more
particularly at paragraphs [12] and [16], of Canadian Red Cross Society
v. Air Canada, 2001 FCT 1012, 211 F.T.R. 94:
[8] Therefore, it cannot be determined that the
action of the Red Cross also interrupted the limitation period with regards to
Alpha.
[9] In my view, the appropriate reasoning and the
conclusion to draw can be found in Newfoundland Steamships Ltd. et al. v.
Canada Steamship Lines Ltd. et al. (1979), 107 D.L.R. (3d) 84, a decision
of the Federal Court of Appeal.
[10] In that case, some plaintiffs listed specifically
in an appendix to their statement of claim in which they had described
themselves in the style of cause as "those persons interested in the cargo
laden on board the ship ‘Fort St. Louis'" sought to add, after the expiry
of the limitation period, the names of additional plaintiffs whose identity was
not known at the time the action was commenced.
[11] Mr. Justice Pratte, who set aside the decision of
the judge below granting the amendment, made the following analysis:
The Judge below, nevertheless, rendered the judgment
against which this appeal is directed and granted the application for reasons
that he summarized as follows [90 D.L.R. (3d) 79 at p. 83, [1979] 1 F.C. 393]:
On the whole, therefore, I am of the opinion that this is
not a case where the claims of any new parties, appearing in the appendix, now
sought to be substituted for the former appendix, are really new claimants
whose claims are prescribed but rather that they are included in the
designation of persons interested in the cargo on the ship. It is merely the
substitution of new particulars which have since come to light for former
particulars and, moreover, in the great majority of the cases merely adds the
name of the shipper as well as the consignee, or conversely, provides
defendants with greater details from which to check the claims. It is not
necessary to decide at this stage of the proceedings whether the claimant
should be the shipper or the consignee but justice requires that whoever
suffered the loss should be compensated for it, provided that the total amount
of the claim does not exceed $509,443.28 (which includes surveyors and
adjusters fees) sought for the "Plaintiff cargo interest for distribution
as their interests may appear" as stated in conclusion of the original
statement of claim.
This judgment, in my respectful opinion, must be set aside.
It is common ground that the prescription of the
plaintiffs' claim was governed by the law of Quebec where the
cause of action arose (see s. 38 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970,
c. 10 (2nd Supp.)). The plaintiffs' claim was based either entirely on
delict, as found by the Judge below, or, as argued by the plaintiffs' counsel,
both on delict and contract. In either case, the statement of claim asserted a
delictual claim which was subject to a prescription of two years (art. 2261 of
the Quebec Civil Code) after the expiry of which the debt (in so far as
it was founded on delict) was absolutely extinguished (art. 2267 Civil Code).
In these circumstances, the Judge could not authorize the addition of new
plaintiffs to the action unless he came to the conclusion that the commencement
of the action in 1975 had interrupted the prescription of the claims of those
new plaintiffs as well as of those who were named as plaintiffs in the original
action: see Leesona v. Consolidated Textile Mills (1977), 82 D.L.R. (3d)
56 at p. 62, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 2 at p. 11, 35 C.P.R. (2d) 254.
It is argued, however, that the plaintiffs were not really
seeking to add new parties to the action; they merely wanted, it is said, to
particularize the description of the plaintiffs in the style of cause
("THOSE PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE CARGO etc. ..."). I do not agree.
Had the plaintiffs been merely described as "those interested in the cargo
...", it is certainly arguable that the action would have been irregularly
instituted and would not, for that reason, have interrupted the prescription.
But this point need not be decided since, in this case, the plaintiffs were not
described in that vague and general way: the style of cause as well as para. 3
of the statement of claim contained an express reference to annex A as
containing the names of all those having an interest in the cargo. The action,
in my opinion, was commenced in the name of the persons enumerated in annex A
and the effect of the judgment under attack is clearly, in my view, to
authorize that new plaintiffs be added to the action.
The decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Leesona
case does not, in my opinion, support the decision of the Trial Division. Here
the plaintiffs were not seeking to correct a misnomer or to overcome a mere
technicality; they wanted to amend the statement of claim so as to add new
parties whose identities had been unknown to all persons concerned at the time
of the commencement of the action. That, in my view, could not be done because
I do not see how the action commenced in 1975 could have interrupted the
prescription of claims of persons who were not parties to that action.
In the exercise of its discretion under Rule 424, the Court
cannot, even in order to achieve a fuller measure of justice, disregard the
effect of prescription. This is, in my view, what the Trial Division has done
here.
[Emphasis added]
[12] In this case, as in Newfoundland, it cannot
be argued that the plaintiffs are seeking to correct a misnomer or to overcome
a mere technicality. Nor is this a case where fairness requires the court’s
intervention to ensure that procedure does not prevail over substance.
[13] An example of such a situation is the Leesona,
cited by Pratte J.A. in Newfoundland Steamships, where, despite the
expiry of the limitation period, the Supreme Court allowed the defendant to
correct its company name in order that the style of cause reflect the parties’
intentions that the action be brought against the operating company and not the
holding company.
[14] In Pateman v. Flying Tiger Line [1987] 3
F.C. 613, upheld on appeal as to the result in (1988) 89 N.R. 155, a decision
the Red Cross relied on heavily, an insurer, which had become legally
subrogated to the rights of the insured, sought to add the name of the insured
as a plaintiff to the action in damages it had brought pursuant to the Act and
the Convention. Notwithstanding the expiry of the two-year limitation period
under article 29 of the Convention, the insurer was allowed to make the change
in order to prevent a potential challenge to its status in the action by the
defendants.
[15] It is clear from the reasons stated at the
beginning and at the end of Pateman that the Court considered the
insurer and the insured to constitute a single party in the action and that
there was a blatant need to remedy the situation if the action was to proceed
on the merits unhindered by procedural requirements.
[16] The situation in this case is distinctly
different from that in Leesona, Pateman and in similar cases
mentioned in either of those decisions.
[39]
Thus, while I am aware of the liberal attitude expressed in
the case law with regard to amendments (see, inter alia, Canderel
Ltd. v Canada, [1994] 1 F.C. 3 (C.A.) and VISX Inc. v Nidek Co.,
[1998] FCJ No 1766), in this case, I do not think it would be fair or in the
interests of justice to allow the plaintiffs to serve and file a re-amended
statement in order to include Wisdom GmbH as a personal defendant in the style
of cause.
[40]
Accordingly, the plaintiffs’ motion to amend will be
dismissed, with costs, which the Court also sets at $2,000.00.
ORDER
1.
The motion by Wisdom GmbH is allowed with costs, which the
Court sets at $2,000, and the order dated September 13, 2010, is set
aside, and the service of the amended statement of claim effected on or about
September 22, 2010, is also set aside. All of the remedies sought by the
plaintiffs in their reply record to this motion are dismissed;
2.
The plaintiff’s motion to amend is dismissed, with costs,
which the Court sets at $2,000.
“Richard
Morneau”
Certified true translation
Sebastian Desbarats, Translator