Z.I. Pompey Industrie v. ECU‑Line N.V., [2003] 1 S.C.R.
450, 2003 SCC 27
ECU‑Line N.V. Appellant
v.
Z.I. Pompey Industrie, Société lyonnaise de messageries
nationales, John S. James Co., Polyfibron Technologies Inc.,
Ellehammer Packaging Inc., and all others having an interest in
the cargo laden on board the M.V. “Canmar Fortune” Respondents
Indexed as: Z.I. Pompey Industrie v. ECU‑Line N.V.
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC
27.
File No.: 28472.
2002: October 2; 2003: May 1.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache, Binnie and
LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of appeal
Conflict of laws — Courts — Jurisdiction — Bills of
lading — Forum selection clauses — Stay of proceedings — Arrangements made with
appellant for carriage of cargo by sea — Respondents filing action against
appellant in Federal Court alleging that cargo was damaged while in transit by
rail — Appellant seeking stay of proceedings on
basis that bill of lading contained forum selection clause giving courts in
Antwerp, Belgium exclusive jurisdiction — Proper test for stay of proceedings
to enforce forum selection clause in bill of lading — Whether “strong cause”
test is proper test — Whether proper test should contemplate inquiry
into whether there was fundamental breach or deviation — Federal Court
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F‑7, s. 50(1) .
The respondents filed an action for damages against
the appellant in the Federal Court, alleging that cargo was damaged while in
transit by rail. Under the bill of lading Antwerp, Belgium was designated as
the port of loading and Seattle was designated as the port of discharge. The
cargo was transported from Antwerp to Montréal, where it was unloaded and
carried by train to Seattle. The bill of lading contained a forum selection
clause stating that “[t]he contract evidenced by or contained in this bill of
Lading is governed by the law of Belgium, and any claim or dispute arising
hereunder or in connection herewith shall be determined by the courts in
Antwerp and no other Courts.” The appellant brought a motion seeking a stay of
proceedings on the basis that the bill of lading required disputes to be
determined exclusively by the courts of Antwerp. A prothonotary denied
the motion. The Federal Court, Trial Division dismissed the appellant’s motion
to set aside the prothonotary’s order. The Federal Court of Appeal upheld the
decision.
Held: The
appeal should be allowed and a stay of proceedings issued in favour of the
appellant.
In the absence of applicable legislation, such as
s. 46(1) of the Marine Liability Act , the proper test for a
stay of proceedings pursuant to s. 50 of the Federal Court Act to
enforce a forum selection clause in a bill of lading is the “strong cause”
test. Once a court is satisfied that a validly concluded bill of lading
otherwise binds the parties, it must grant the stay unless the plaintiff can
show sufficiently strong reasons to support the conclusion that it would not be
reasonable or just in the circumstances to require the plaintiff to adhere to
the terms of the clause. In exercising its discretion, the court should take
into account all of the circumstances of the particular case. The tripartite
test for interlocutory injunctions is an inappropriate test for a stay of
proceedings to enforce a forum selection clause in a bill of lading. First,
the tripartite test would render most forum selection clauses unenforceable,
creating commercial uncertainty by unduly minimizing the importance of
contractual undertakings. Second, the tripartite test is also problematic
because the first part of the test requires the court to evaluate the
likelihood of success on the merits of the case — which would be impossible
because there is normally no determination on the merits. Finally, the
tripartite test would make it difficult to establish irreparable harm in the
context of a stay application based on a forum selection clause.
On an application for a stay to uphold a forum
selection clause in a bill of lading, a court must not delve into whether one
party has deviated from or fundamentally breached an otherwise validly formed
contract. Such inquiries would render forum selection clauses illusory since most
disputes will involve allegations which, if proved, will make the agreement
terminable or voidable by the aggrieved party. Issues respecting an alleged
fundamental breach of contract or deviation therefrom should generally be
determined under the law and by the court chosen by the parties in the bill of
lading. Once it is determined that the bill of lading binds the parties, the
“strong cause” test constitutes an inquiry into questions such as the
convenience of the parties, fairness between the parties and the interests of
justice, not of the substantive legal issues underlying the dispute.
The decisions of the prothonotary, the motions judge
and the Court of Appeal in this case are clearly wrong. The prothonotary, to
the extent he applied the “tripartite test”, erred in law, as did the Court of
Appeal in concluding that the appropriate test for a stay of proceedings
involving a bill of lading with a forum selection clause was the “tripartite
test” for interlocutory injunctions. The “strong cause” test remains
relevant and effective and no social, moral or economic changes justify the
departure advanced by the Court of Appeal. Further, the prothonotary
erred in law when he determined that the forum selection clause was void as a
result of the alleged deviation stemming from the discharge of the cargo in
Montréal. It is unnecessary to determine whether there has been a
fundamental breach or deviation because the forum selection clause clearly
covers such a dispute.
Cases Cited
Applied: The
“Eleftheria”, [1969] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 237;
distinguished: Manitoba (Attorney General) v. Metropolitan
Stores Ltd., [1987] 1 S.C.R. 110; considered: Guarantee
Co. of North America v. Gordon Capital Corp., [1999] 3 S.C.R. 423;
referred to: American Cyanamid Co. v. Ethicon Ltd.,
[1975] 1 All E.R. 504; Captain v. Far Eastern SS. Co. (1978), 7 B.C.L.R.
279; Canada v. Aqua‑Gem Investments Ltd., [1993] 2 F.C. 425; Jian
Sheng Co. v. Great Tempo S.A., [1998] 3 F.C. 418, leave to appeal refused,
[1998] 3 S.C.R. vi; Morguard Investments Ltd. v. De Savoye, [1990] 3
S.C.R. 1077; Holt Cargo Systems Inc. v. ABC Containerline N.V. (Trustees of),
[2001] 3 S.C.R. 907, 2001 SCC 90; Amchem Products Inc. v. British Columbia
(Workers’ Compensation Board), [1993] 1 S.C.R. 897; RJR—MacDonald Inc.
v. Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 311; The “Seapearl” v.
Seven Seas Dry Cargo Shipping Corp., [1983] 2 F.C. 161; Anraj Fish
Products Industries Ltd. v. Hyundai Merchant Marine Co. (2000), 262 N.R.
270; Sarabia v. “Oceanic Mindoro” (The) (1996), 26 B.C.L.R. (3d) 143,
leave to appeal refused, [1997] 2 S.C.R. xiv; Maritime Telegraph and
Telephone Co. v. Pre Print Inc. (1996), 131 D.L.R. (4th) 471; Morrison
v. Society of Lloyd’s (2000), 224 N.B.R. (2d) 1, leaves to appeal refused,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. viii and xi; Trendtex Trading Corp. v. Credit Suisse,
[1982] A.C. 679; The Bremen v. Zapata Off‑Shore Co., 407 U.S. 1
(1972); Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc. v. Universal Specialties Ltd.,
[1997] 1 N.Z.L.R. 186; Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute, 499 U.S.
585 (1991); Vimar Seguros y Reaseguros, S.A. v. M/V Sky Reefer, 515 U.S.
528 (1995); Mackender v. Feldia A.G., [1966] 3 All E.R. 847; Fairfield
v. Low (1990), 71 O.R. (2d) 599; Ash v. Lloyd’s Corp. (1992), 9 O.R.
(3d) 755, leave to appeal refused, [1992] 3 S.C.R. v; Drew Brown Ltd. v. The
“Orient Trader”, [1974] S.C.R. 1286; Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude
Canada Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 426; Incremona‑Salerno Marmi Affini
Siciliani (I.S.M.A.S.) s.n.c. v. Ship Castor (2002), 297 N.R. 151, 2002 FCA
479.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F‑7, s. 50(1) .
Marine Liability Act, S.C. 2001, c. 6, s. 46(1) .
Authors Cited
Michell, M. Paul. “Forum
Selection Clauses and Fundamental Breach: Z.I. Pompey Industrie
v. ECU‑Line N.V., The Canmar Fortune” (2002), 36 Can.
Bus. L.J. 453.
Peel, Edwin. “Exclusive
jurisdiction agreements: purity and pragmatism in the conflict of laws”,
[1998] L.M.C.L.Q. 182.
Tetley, William. Marine Cargo
Claims, 3rd ed. Montréal: Yvon Blais, 1988.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal
(2001), 268 N.R. 364, [2001] F.C.J. No. 96 (QL), dismissing an appeal from
a decision of the Trial Division (1999), 182 F.T.R. 112, [1999] F.C.J.
No. 2017 (QL), dismissing a motion to set aside the order of Prothonotary
Hargrave denying a stay of proceedings (1999), 179 F.T.R. 254, [1999] F.C.J.
No. 1584 (QL). Appeal allowed.
H. Peter Swanson, for the appellant.
George J. Pollack and Jean‑Marie Fontaine, for the respondents.
The judgment of the Court was
delivered by
1
Bastarache J. — The
appellant submits that the appropriate test on a motion for a stay of
proceedings to uphold a forum selection clause in a bill of lading is the
“strong cause” test, as set out by Brandon J. in The “Eleftheria”,
[1969] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 237 (Adm. Div.). The respondents, however, contend that
the Federal Court of Appeal was correct in applying the tripartite test for
interlocutory injunctions established in American Cyanamid Co. v. Ethicon
Ltd., [1975] 1 All E.R. 504 (H.L.). In my view, there is no legal or
policy justification for setting aside the “strong cause” test in the context
of a stay of proceedings to uphold a forum selection clause in a bill of
lading. The dispute in this case arises under or in connection with the bill
of lading. Its broad, unambiguous and unqualified forum selection clause was
clearly intended to cover the dispute that gave rise to this appeal.
I. Facts
2
The respondent Polyfibron Technologies Inc. purchased a photo processor
and four “sub-assemblies” located in France from the respondent Z.I. Pompey
Industrie for resale to its customer, the respondent Ellehammer Packaging Inc.
The cargo was to be delivered directly to Ellehammer in Seattle, Washington.
Polyfibron retained the services of the respondent John S. James Co., a freight
forwarder, to arrange for the importation of the cargo. John S. James Co., in
turn, retained the services of the respondent Société lyonnaise de messageries
nationales (“S.L.M.N. Shipping”), which made arrangements with ECU-Line France,
a division of the appellant ECU-Line N.V., a Belgian company, for carriage of
the cargo by sea.
3
The respondent John S. James Co. was aware that the cargo could not be
transported by rail without there being a significant risk of it sustaining
damage and communicated this fact to the respondent S.L.M.N. Shipping.
4
Under a clean on-board bill of lading executed at Lyon, France on
January 23, 1997, the appellant was to carry the cargo from Antwerp,
Belgium, to Seattle. The bill of lading designates John S. James Co. as the
“consignee”, Antwerp as the “port of loading”, and Seattle as the “port of
discharge”. It bears the following forum selection clause:
The contract evidenced by or contained in this bill of Lading is
governed by the law of Belgium, and any claim or dispute arising hereunder or
in connection herewith shall be determined by the courts in Antwerp and no
other Courts.
The back of
the bill of lading contains, among other provisions, the following clause:
12. METHODS AND ROUTE OF TRANSPORTATION
(1) The Carrier may ant [sic] any time and without notice to the
Merchant: use any means of transport or storage whatsoever; load or carry the
Goods on any vessel whether named on the front hereof or not; transfer the
Goods from one conveyance to another including transshipping or carrying the
same on another vessel than that named on the front hereof or by any other
means of transport whatsoever; at any place unpack and remove Goods which have
been stuffed in or on a Container and forward the same in any manner
whatsoever; proceed at any speed and by any route in his discretion (whether or
not the nearest or most or customary or advertised route) and proceed to or
stay at any place whatsoever once or more often and in any order; load or
unload the Goods from any conveyance at any place (whether or not the place is
a port named on the front hereof as the intended Port of Loading or intended
Port of Discharge); . . .
(2) The liberties set out in (1) above be [sic] invoked by the
Carrier for any purposes whatsoever whether or not connected with the Carriage
of the Goods. Anything done accordance [sic] with (1) above or any
delay arising therfrom [sic] shall be deemed to be within the
contractual Carriage and shall not be a deviation or whatsoever nature or
degree.
5
The appellant transported the cargo from Antwerp to Montréal, where it
was unloaded. From there the cargo was carried by train to Seattle. The
respondents filed an action for damages of $60,761.74 in the Federal Court of
Canada, alleging that the cargo was damaged while in transit by rail. The
appellant denied the cargo had been damaged, arguing in the alternative that
any damage had been caused by the respondents, third parties, or events for
which it was not responsible. The appellant also brought a motion seeking a
stay of proceedings on the basis that the bill of lading required disputes to
be determined exclusively by the courts of Antwerp.
II. Relevant Statutory Provisions
6
The following statutory provisions are central to this appeal:
Federal
Court Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7
50. (1) The Court may, in its discretion,
stay proceedings in any cause or matter,
(a) on the ground that the claim is being proceeded with in
another court or jurisdiction; or
(b) where for any other reason it is in the interest of justice
that the proceedings be stayed.
Marine
Liability Act, S.C. 2001, c. 6
46. (1) If a contract for the carriage of
goods by water to which the Hamburg Rules do not apply provides for the
adjudication or arbitration of claims arising under the contract in a place
other than Canada, a claimant may institute judicial or arbitral proceedings in
a court or arbitral tribunal in Canada that would be competent to determine the
claim if the contract had referred the claim to Canada, where
(a) the actual port of loading or discharge, or the intended
port of loading or discharge under the contract, is in Canada;
(b) the person against whom the claim is made resides or has a
place of business, branch or agency in Canada; or
(c) the contract was made in Canada.
III. Judicial
History
A. Federal
Court of Canada, Trial Division (1999), 179 F.T.R. 254
7
The appellant sought a stay of proceedings before the Federal Court,
pursuant to s. 50 of the Federal Court Act , arguing that the courts of
Antwerp were the proper jurisdiction to deal with any disputes arising from the
bill of lading. The prothonotary held that the appellant had moved for a stay
within reasonable time given the implementation of new court rules and had
therefore not attorned to its jurisdiction. The prothonotary accepted and
applied the “strong cause” test as set out in the The “Eleftheria”
characterizing its finding in the following way, at paras. 4-5:
. . . I accept that ECU-Line prefers to litigate in a familiar
jurisdiction and does not bring up the Antwerp jurisdiction merely to seek
procedural advantage. Other factors favouring the upholding of the jurisdiction
clause include reasonable connections with Belgium, Belgian and French
witnesses, that any time bar which might preclude the plaintiffs from bringing
their case in Antwerp has been waived, that no security has been posted and
that enforcement of a Belgian judgment against the carrier, a Belgian company,
should present no particular difficulties.
I accept, from the Plaintiffs’ point of view, that
there will be Canadian and American witnesses, including from the American
east-coast freight forwarder through whom the Plaintiff, Polyfibron
Technologies Inc., arranged the carriage. Certainly the Tribunal of Commerce in
[Antwerp], which would decide the case under the jurisdiction clause, conducts
its proceedings in Flemish and decides cases on the basis of documents and
statements, a procedure precluding witnesses and cross-examination. There may
also be considerably more delay in most instances than in the Federal Court and
all the more so in the case of an appeal. There are also some lesser factors
which favour litigation in Vancouver.
The
prothonotary concluded, at para. 5, that the factors raised by the respondents,
while “substantial”, were “just short [in this instance] of the strong case”
which, by The “Eleftheria”, the respondents had to present in order to
override the forum selection clause.
8
However, the prothonotary added that the respondents had presented a
persuasive case that the bill of lading had come to an end in Montréal. For that
reason, there was no forum selection clause to apply to the dispute.
Notwithstanding clause 12 of the bill of lading, the prothonotary, relying on
Professor W. Tetley’s Marine Cargo Claims (3rd ed. 1988), accepted the
presumption that a serious and willful breach or deviation of a contract of
carriage may bring into question exclusion or limitation clauses in the
contract. The prothonotary’s response to the appellant’s contention that
issues of fundamental breach or deviation should be determined on the merits by
the trial judge was the following, at para. 8 :
The answer to this is not complex. An interim injunction, obtained on
an interlocutory application, which requires a testing of the waters by looking
at the strength of the case, the harm being caused and the balance of
convenience, is analogous to denial of a stay of the basis of a strong case
that the jurisdiction clause is just not applicable. The interim injunction
does not handicap the trial judge, nor should the denial of a stay on the basis
that the jurisdiction clause is in all likelihood not available. Any prejudice
to ECU-Line in having to litigate in Canada can be compensated by costs.
The
prothonotary stated that it was common knowledge that rail carriage is usually
accompanied by vibration, bumps and jolts, though considered this to be
immaterial to the present case in which the intent to deviate was the sole
issue. The prothonotary concluded that the appellant’s deviation from the bill
of lading was both unreasonable and voluntary. Relying on Captain v. Far
Eastern SS. Co. (1978), 7 B.C.L.R. 279 (S.C.), the prothonotary concluded
that there was no contract at the time the appellant discharged the cargo in
Montréal and thus no forum selection clause upon which it could rely.
9
The motion for a stay of proceedings to uphold the forum selection
clause was therefore denied.
B. Federal
Court of Canada, Trial Division (1999), 182 F.T.R. 112
10
The court concluded that the prothonotary was obliged to take into
account all the circumstances of the case in determining whether the respondent
had demonstrated a “strong cause” in favour of denying a stay, pursuant to the
test set out in The “Eleftheria”, an inquiry that did not preclude him
from concluding that the bill of lading ended in Montréal and that its forum
selection clause did not apply thereafter. The court added that in any event
the appellant would have the opportunity to raise its arguments regarding the
existence of the bill of lading and its forum selection clause before a trial
judge.
11
The court dismissed with costs the motion to set aside the order of the
prothonotary.
C. Federal Court of Appeal (2001), 268
N.R. 364
12
The Court of Appeal held that the test for reviewing decisions of a
prothonotary is whether the prothonotary’s exercise of discretion was clearly
wrong and that the test for reviewing the exercise of discretion of a motions
judge is whether sufficient weight was given to all relevant considerations.
13
The Court of Appeal concluded that The “Eleftheria” did not
govern the case, stating, at para. 27:
The burden of the appellant’s submission is that
when, as here, a contract contains a jurisdiction clause requiring that all
disputes, wherever they arise, are to be dealt with by the Courts of a
particular jurisdiction, Anglo-American and Anglo-Canadian jurisprudence both
conclude that the dispute must be dealt with by the Courts of the jurisdiction
the parties have agreed to. The appellant says that since The Eleftheria
no case in Anglo-Canadian or Anglo-American jurisprudence has held otherwise. I
disagree. Jian Sheng Co. [v. Great Tempo S.A., [1998] 3 F.C. 418
(C.A.)] is a case where this Court held that a prothonotary was right to refuse
a stay in circumstances where the appellant had not led sufficient evidence to
support the existence of jurisdiction elsewhere than Canada.
14
The Court of Appeal emphasized The “Eleftheria” was decided in
1969 and the House of Lords had since decided American Cyanamid, supra,
thereby relaxing the requirements for an interlocutory injunction to a
tripartite test: first, a preliminary and tentative assessment of the merits of
the case must show there is a serious issue to be tried; second, consideration
must be given to whether the party seeking the interlocutory injunction would
suffer irreparable harm unless the injunction is granted; and third, there must
be a determination as to which party would suffer the greater harm as a result
of the granting or refusing of an interlocutory injunction.
15
The Court of Appeal quoted with approval Beetz J., writing for a
unanimous Supreme Court, in Manitoba (Attorney General) v. Metropolitan
Stores Ltd., [1987] 1 S.C.R. 110, at p. 127:
A stay of proceedings and an interlocutory
injunction are remedies of the same nature. In the absence of a different test
prescribed by statute, they have sufficient characteristics in common to be
governed by the same rules and the courts have rightly tended to apply to the
granting of interlocutory stay the principles which they follow with respect to
interlocutory injunctions . . . .
The Court of
Appeal reasoned that although the prothonotary had not referred to either American
Cyanamid or Metropolitan Stores, it was likely what he had in mind
when he concluded, at para. 8:
An interim injunction, obtained on an interlocutory application, which
requires a testing of the waters by looking at the strength of the case, the
harm being caused and the balance of convenience, is analogous to denial of a
stay of the basis of a strong case that the jurisdiction clause is just not
applicable.
The Court of
Appeal concluded that given the evolution of English and Canadian
jurisprudence, the proper test to apply in stay applications is the tripartite
test employed for the purposes of obtaining interlocutory injunctions.
16
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal with costs.
IV. Issues
17
1. What is the proper test on a motion brought for a stay
of proceedings to enforce the forum selection clause in a bill of lading?
2. Does that test contemplate an inquiry into
whether there was a fundamental breach or deviation, or should such an inquiry
be left to the decision maker in the agreed forum?
V. Analysis
18
Discretionary orders of prothonotaries ought to be disturbed by a
motions judge only where (a) they are clearly wrong, in the sense that the
exercise of discretion was based upon a wrong principle or a misapprehension of
the facts, or (b) in making them, the prothonotary improperly exercised his or
her discretion on a question vital to the final issue of the case: Canada v.
Aqua-Gem Investments Ltd., [1993] 2 F.C. 425 (C.A.), per MacGuigan
J.A., at pp. 462-63. An appellate court may interfere with the decision of a
motions judge where the motions judge had no grounds to interfere with the
prothonotary’s decision or, in the event such grounds existed, if the decision
of the motions judge was arrived at on a wrong basis or was plainly wrong: Jian
Sheng Co. v. Great Tempo S.A., [1998] 3 F.C. 418 (C.A.), per Décary
J.A., at pp. 427-28, leave to appeal refused, [1998] 3 S.C.R. vi. For the
reasons below, I conclude that the decisions of the prothonotary, the motions
judge and the Court of Appeal are clearly wrong.
A. Stays of Proceedings to Enforce a Forum
Selection Clause
19
Pursuant to s. 50(1) of the Federal Court Act , the court has
the discretion to stay proceedings in any cause or matter on the ground that
the claim is proceeding in another court or jurisdiction, or where, for any
other reason, it is in the interest of justice that the proceedings be stayed.
For some time, the exercise of this judicial discretion has been governed by
the “strong cause” test when a party brings a motion for a stay of proceedings
to enforce a forum selection clause in a bill of lading. Brandon J. set out
the test as follows in The “Eleftheria”, at p. 242:
(1) Where plaintiffs sue in England in breach of an agreement to refer
disputes to a foreign Court, and the defendants apply for a stay, the English
Court, assuming the claim to be otherwise within the jurisdiction, is not bound
to grant a stay but has a discretion whether to do so or not. (2) The
discretion should be exercised by granting a stay unless strong cause for not
doing so is shown. (3) The burden of proving such strong cause is on the
plaintiffs. (4) In exercising its discretion the Court should take into
account all the circumstances of the particular case. (5) In particular, but
without prejudice to (4), the following matters, where they arise, may be
properly regarded: (a) In what country the evidence on the issues of fact is
situated, or more readily available, and the effect of that on the relative
convenience and expense of trial as between the English and foreign Courts. (b)
Whether the law of the foreign Court applies and, if so, whether it differs
from English law in any material respects. (c) With what country either party
is connected, and how closely. (d) Whether the defendants genuinely desire
trial in the foreign country, or are only seeking procedural advantages. (e)
Whether the plaintiffs would be prejudiced by having to sue in the foreign
Court because they would (i) be deprived of security for that claim; (ii) be
unable to enforce any judgment obtained; (iii) be faced with a time-bar not
applicable in England; or (iv) for political, racial, religious or other
reasons be unlikely to get a fair trial.
20
Forum selection clauses are common components of international
commercial transactions, and are particularly common in bills of lading. They
have, in short, “been applied for ages in the industry and by the courts”:
Décary J.A. in Jian Sheng, supra, at para. 7. These
clauses are generally to be encouraged by the courts as they create certainty
and security in transaction, derivatives of order and fairness, which are
critical components of private international law: La Forest J. in Morguard
Investments Ltd. v. De Savoye, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1077, at pp. 1096-97; Holt
Cargo Systems Inc. v. ABC Containerline N.V. (Trustees of), [2001] 3
S.C.R. 907, 2001 SCC 90, at paras. 71-72. The “strong cause” test remains
relevant and effective and no social, moral or economic changes justify the
departure advanced by the Court of Appeal. In the context of international
commerce, order and fairness have been achieved at least in part by application
of the “strong cause” test. This test rightly imposes the burden on the
plaintiff to satisfy the court that there is good reason it should not be bound
by the forum selection clause. It is essential that courts give full weight to
the desirability of holding contracting parties to their agreements. There is
no reason to consider forum selection clauses to be non-responsibility clauses
in disguise. In any event, the “strong cause” test provides sufficient leeway
for judges to take improper motives into consideration in relevant cases and
prevent defendants from relying on forum selection clauses to gain an unfair
procedural advantage.
21
There is a similarity between the factors which are to be taken into
account when considering an application for a stay based on a forum selection
clause and those factors which are weighed by a court considering whether to
stay proceedings in “ordinary” cases applying the forum non conveniens doctrine:
E. Peel in “Exclusive jurisdiction agreements: purity and pragmatism in the
conflict of laws”, [1998] L.M.C.L.Q. 182, at pp. 189-90. The latter
inquiry is well settled in Canada: Amchem Products Inc. v. British
Columbia (Workers’ Compensation Board), [1993] 1 S.C.R. 897. In the latter
inquiry, the burden is normally on the defendant to show why a stay should be granted,
but the presence of a forum selection clause in the former is, in my view,
sufficiently important to warrant a different test, one where the starting
point is that parties should be held to their bargain, and where the plaintiff
has the burden of showing why a stay should not be granted. I am not convinced
that a unified approach to forum non conveniens, where a choice of
jurisdiction clause constitutes but one factor to be considered, is
preferable. As Peel, supra, notes, at p. 190, I fear that such an
approach would not
ensure that full weight is given to the jurisdiction clause since not
only should the clause itself be taken into account, but also the effect which
it has on the factors which are relevant to the determination of the natural forum.
Factors which may otherwise be decisive may be less so if one takes into
account that the parties agreed in advance to a hearing in a particular forum
and must be deemed to have done so fully aware of the consequences which that
might have on, for example, the transportation of witnesses and evidence, or
compliance with foreign procedure etc.
In my view, a
separate approach to applications for a stay of proceedings involving forum
selection clauses in bills of lading ensures that these considerations are
properly taken into account and that the parties’ agreement is given effect in
all but exceptional circumstances. See also M. P. Michell, “Forum Selection
Clauses and Fundamental Breach: Z.I. Pompey Industrie v. ECU-Line N.V., The
Canmar Fortune” (2002), 36 Can. Bus. L.J. 453, at pp. 471-72.
B. The Inappropriateness of the Tripartite
Test
22
The respondents adopted the Court of Appeal’s holding in favour of
extending the tripartite test for interlocutory injunction to motions for a
stay of proceedings to enforce a forum selection clause in a bill of lading.
The tripartite test was set out as follows by this Court in RJR—MacDonald
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 311, at p. 334:
First, a preliminary assessment must be made of the merits of the case
to ensure that there is a serious question to be tried. Secondly, it must be
determined whether the applicant would suffer irreparable harm if the
application were refused. Finally, an assessment must be made as to which of
the parties would suffer greater harm from the granting or refusal of the
remedy pending a decision on the merits.
In support of
the move to the tripartite test, the Court of Appeal quoted, at para. 29, with
approval this Court’s statement in Metropolitan Stores, at p. 127:
A stay of proceedings and an interlocutory
injunction are remedies of the same nature. In the absence of a different test
prescribed by statute, they have sufficient characteristics in common to be
governed by the same rules and the courts have rightly tended to apply to the
granting of interlocutory stay the principles which they follow with respect to
interlocutory injunctions.
While a stay
of proceedings to enforce a forum selection clause may be of the same nature as
an interlocutory injunction, I must respectfully disagree with the conclusion
of the Court of Appeal.
23
The conclusion of the Court of Appeal is not supported by this Court’s
decision in Metropolitan Stores. The two main issues in that case were
whether the Court of Appeal erred in failing to recognize a presumption of
constitutional validity where legislation is challenged under the Charter,
and what principles govern the exercise of a Superior Court judge’s
discretionary power to order a stay until the constitutionality of impugned
legislation has been determined. The context of a constitutional challenge has
little in common with the case at bar. Indeed, Metropolitan Stores did
not involve forum selection clauses, and the underlying desirability of holding
contracting parties to their bargain was not at issue. That case did not
concern private international law; consequently, considerations of comity,
uniformity of law, forum shopping and related issues were neither canvassed nor
addressed by the Court.
24
As recently as 1998, Décary J.A., for a unanimous Federal Court of
Appeal in Jian Sheng, confirmed at para. 10 the appropriateness of the
“strong cause” test in Canada, a case in which the issue was whether the forum
selection clause in a bill of lading was void for uncertainty:
Where, in admiralty matters before this Court, a
defendant applies for a stay pursuant to section 50 of the Federal Court Act
. . . on the basis of a jurisdiction clause found in a bill of lading, the
defendant has the burden of persuading the Court that the conditions of
application of the clause have been met. Once the Court is satisfied that the
clause applies, the burden of proof then shifts to the plaintiff to show
sufficiently strong reasons to support the conclusion that it would not be
reasonable or just in the circumstances to keep the plaintiff to the terms of
the contract . . . . These “strong reasons” have been summarized in the
often-quoted reasons of Brandon J. (as he then was) in The “Eleftheria”
. . . .
In Jian
Sheng, the forum selection clause contained in the bill of lading required
the defendant to show it was the carrier and what was its principal place of
business. Jian Sheng does not, as the Court of Appeal held in the case
at bar, undermine in any way the “strong cause” test. Indeed, the tripartite
test adopted by the Court of Appeal in this case constitutes a significant and
unjustified departure from the jurisprudence not only of the Federal Court, but
also of provincial courts, and those of other jurisdictions. See for instance:
The “Seapearl” v. Seven Seas Dry Cargo Shipping Corp., [1983] 2
F.C. 161 (C.A.), per Pratte J.A., at pp. 176-77, and per Lalande
D.J., at p. 180; Anraj Fish Products Industries Ltd. v. Hyundai Merchant
Marine Co. (2000), 262 N.R. 270 (F.C.A.), at para. 5; Sarabia v.
“Oceanic Mindoro” (The) (1996), 26 B.C.L.R. (3d) 143 (C.A.), at paras.
37-38, leave to appeal refused, [1997] 2 S.C.R. xiv; Maritime Telegraph and
Telephone Co. v. Pre Print Inc. (1996), 131 D.L.R. (4th) 471
(N.S.C.A.), at p. 483; Morrison v. Society of Lloyd’s (2000), 224
N.B.R. (2d) 1 (C.A.), at para. 14, leaves to appeal refused, [2000] 2 S.C.R.
viii and xi; Trendtex Trading Corp. v. Credit Suisse, [1982] A.C.
679 (H.L.); The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co., 407 U.S. 1
(1972), at p. 15; Advanced Cardiovascular Systems Inc. v. Universal
Specialties Ltd., [1997] 1 N.Z.L.R. 186 (C.A.), at p. 190.
25
There are also compelling public policy reasons in favour of upholding
the “strong cause” test. If the tripartite test were employed to deal with
situations like the case at bar, most forum selection clauses would be rendered
unenforceable, creating commercial uncertainty by unduly minimizing the
importance of contractual undertakings. Instead of requiring a plaintiff to
demonstrate a “strong cause” to not enforce a forum selection clause, the
burden would be on the applicant to establish the elements of the tripartite
test. The “strong cause” test rightly places the onus on the plaintiff who
commences suit contrary to the terms of a forum selection clause.
26
Applying the tripartite test to a situation of this nature is also
problematic because the first part of the test requires the court to evaluate
the likelihood of success on the merits of the case. This part of the test is
designed to allow a motions judge the opportunity to deal with legal issues in
preliminary proceedings without prejudice to the final adjudication of their
merits. In the case of motions to stay proceedings based on a forum selection
clause in a bill of lading, such a process would be impossible because there is
normally no determination on the merits. Either the stay will be granted, and
the proceedings in Canada will come to an end, or the stay will be denied and
the defendant will have to defend the case on the merits in Canada, losing the
benefit of the jurisdiction clause. For this reason the rule governing such
stay applications cannot be based on a test that relies on the likelihood of
success on the merits.
27
The test propounded by the Court of Appeal would make it difficult to establish
harm in the context of a stay application based on a forum selection clause.
Indeed, I can think of no instance where a defendant would suffer irreparable
harm by being required to defend a lawsuit in a Canadian court. I am not
satisfied that litigation costs disproportionate to the amount of the claim
would constitute irreparable harm, as the respondents have argued. The “strong
cause” test reflects the desirability that parties honour their contractual
commitments and is consistent with the principles of order and fairness at the
heart of private international law, as well as those of certainty and security
of transaction at the heart of international commercial transactions. I
see no reason to depart from the traditional approach for a stay of proceedings
when the applicability of a forum selection clause is at issue. The Court of
Appeal in effect read the choice of jurisdiction clause out of the contract.
This approach is, in my view, untenable.
28
The respondents submit we ought to accord little weight to the forum
selection clause in the bill of lading because bills of lading are, as a
general rule, contracts of adhesion, devised unilaterally by the appellant.
This submission is without merit despite the fact that bills of lading are often
issued on pre-printed forms. See Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
499 U.S. 585 (1991), at pp. 593-94.
29
Bills of lading are typically entered into by sophisticated parties
familiar with the negotiation of maritime shipping transactions who should, in
normal circumstances, be held to their bargain. See Vimar Seguros y
Reaseguros, S.A. v. M/V Sky Reefer, 515 U.S. 528 (1995). The parties in
this appeal are corporations with significant experience in international
maritime commerce. The respondents were aware of industry practices and could
have reasonably expected that the bill of lading would contain a forum
selection clause. A forum selection clause could very well have been
negotiated with the appellant, in light of the respondent John S. James Co.’s
insistence that S.L.M.N. Shipping transport the cargo solely by sea. There is
no evidence that this bill of lading is the result of grossly uneven bargaining
power that would invalidate the forum selection clause contained therein.
C. Fundamental Breach and Deviation
30
Having concluded that the “strong cause” test governs whether to grant a
stay in the context of a bill of lading with a forum selection clause, I turn
to whether, in taking into account all the circumstances of the particular
case, the Court should consider issues arising under the contract. The
respondents submit the Court should do just that, relying in part on the
following passage from Professor Tetley in Marine Cargo Claims, supra,
at p. 99:
When however the breach is so serious, usually the
result of a fraudulent or wilful act, the courts have questioned whether the
carrier may rely on the terms of the contract or the law, and in particular,
whether the carrier may rely on the exclusion or limitation clauses in the contract
and the law because he has seemingly placed himself outside of the contract and
the law.
In my view,
the prothonotary erred in law when he determined the forum selection clause was
void as a result of the alleged deviation stemming from the discharge of the
cargo in Montréal.
31
Issues respecting an alleged fundamental breach of contract or deviation
therefrom should generally be determined under the law and by the court chosen
by the parties in the bill of lading. The “strong cause” test, once it is
determined that the bill of lading otherwise binds the parties (for instance,
that the bill of lading as it relates to jurisdiction does not offend public
policy, was not the product of fraud or of grossly uneven bargaining
positions), constitutes an inquiry into questions such as the convenience of
the parties, fairness between the parties and the interests of justice, not of
the substantive legal issues underlying the dispute. See Mackender v. Feldia
A.G., [1966] 3 All E.R. 847 (C.A.), per Lord Denning, at
pp. 849-50, and per Lord Diplock, at p. 852. Put differently, a
court, in the context of an application for a stay to uphold a forum selection
clause in a bill of lading, must not delve into whether one party has deviated
from, or fundamentally breached an otherwise validly formed contract. Such
inquiries would render forum selection clauses illusory since most disputes
will involve allegations which, if proved, will make the agreement terminable
or voidable by the aggrieved party. Moreover, while the choice of forum for
the determination of the existence of the agreement would be made without
reference to the forum selection clause in the contract, if the agreement were
found to remain intact, resort to the said clause would presumably be necessary
to decide the appropriate forum in which to settle the rights of the parties
under the agreement.
32
The position adopted by the Court of Appeal would remove many disputes
from the reach of a widely framed forum selection clause by the mere allegation
of various types of wrongful conduct. In my view, where, as here, the parties
agree that claims or disputes arising under or in connection with a bill of
lading are to “be determined by the courts in Antwerp and no other Courts”, a
proceeding in which one party contends that the other party deviated from the
agreement such as to give the former the right to terminate or void the
contract remains a proceeding in respect of a claim or dispute arising under or
in connection with the bill of lading: Fairfield v. Low (1990),
71 O.R. (2d) 599 (H.C.), at pp. 605-8; Ash v. of Lloyd’s Corp.
(1992), 9 O.R. (3d) 755 (C.A.), at p. 758, leave to appeal refused, [1992] 3
S.C.R. v; Morrison, supra, at paras. 13 and 19. See also Drew
Brown Ltd. v. The “Orient Trader”, [1974] S.C.R. 1286, per Ritchie
J., at p. 1288, and per Laskin J., at p. 1318, where an alleged
deviation was found not to displace an otherwise valid choice of law clause.
33
The conclusion that allegations of deviation or fundamental breach are
matters arising under the contract that should not be considered in determining
whether to give effect to a forum selection clause is supported by the
construction approach to fundamental breach considered by our Court in Guarantee
Co. of North America v. Gordon Capital Corp., [1999] 3 S.C.R. 423, a
case concerning the use of fundamental breach in the context of time limitation
provisions. Discussing Hunter Engineering Co. v. Syncrude Canada Ltd.,
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 426 (a case involving fundamental breach in the context of
clauses excluding liability), the Court said this, at para. 52:
[W]hether fundamental breach prevents the breaching party from
continuing to rely on an exclusion clause is a matter of construction rather
than a rule of law. The only limitation placed upon enforcing the contract as
written in the event of a fundamental breach would be to refuse to enforce an
exclusion of liability in circumstances where to do so would be unconscionable,
according to Dickson C.J., or unfair, unreasonable or otherwise contrary to
public policy, according to Wilson J.
In my view,
the policy rationale in support of the construction approach applied to
exclusion and time limitation clauses is equally applicable to forum selection
clauses in bills of lading.
34
In the case at bar, it is unnecessary to determine whether there has
been a fundamental breach or deviation because the forum selection clause
clearly covers such a dispute. The language of the clause is unambiguous and
not subject to any qualifications, and the parties’ bargain was not
unconscionable or unreasonable. The clause becomes relevant precisely in
disputes such as this one, as it regulates the way in which liability for
deviation or breach of contract is to be established.
35
This approach is sound for policy reasons. Stay applications in the
Federal Court should be brought quickly after commencement of the suit and
consequently, the parties will have limited knowledge and information regarding
the strength or weakness of their opponent’s case. Issues regarding whether
there has been, for instance, an unreasonable deviation raise complicated
questions of fact that require a consideration of all the circumstances giving
rise to the alleged deviation.
36
Given my conclusions, I do not consider it necessary to address the
issue of the relationship between deviation and fundamental breach. Suffice it
to say that, in this case, either allegation concerns a dispute arising under
or in connection with the bill of lading. There is no need to consider the
applicability of the doctrine of separability.
D. Section 46 of the Marine Liability Act
37
Section 46(1) of the Marine Liability Act , which entered into
force on August 8, 2001, has the effect of removing from the Federal Court its
discretion under s. 50 of the Federal Court Act to stay proceedings
because of a forum selection clause where the requirements of s. 46(1) (a),
(b), or (c) are met. This includes where the actual port of
loading or discharge is in Canada. In this case, there would be no question
that the Federal Court is an appropriate forum to hear the respondents’ claim
but for the fact that s. 46 does not apply to judicial proceedings commenced
prior to its coming into force: Incremona-Salerno Marmi Affini Siciliani
(I.S.M.A.S.) s.n.c. v. Ship Castor (2002), 297 N.R. 151, 2002 FCA
479, at paras. 13-24. Section 46 of the Marine Liability Act is
therefore irrelevant in this appeal.
38
Indeed, s. 46(1) would appear to establish that, in select
circumstances, Parliament has deemed it appropriate to limit the scope of forum
selection clauses by facilitating the litigation in Canada of claims related to
the carriage of goods by water having a minimum level of connection to this
country. Such a legislative development does not, however, provide support for
the fundamental jurisprudential shift made by the Court of Appeal in the case
at bar. To the contrary, s. 46(1) indicates Parliament’s intent to broaden the
jurisdiction of the Federal Court only in very particular instances that can
easily be ascertained by a prothonotary called upon to grant a stay of
proceedings pursuant to the forum selection clause of a bill of lading.
Section 46(1) in no way mandates a prothonotary to consider the merits of the
case, an approach in line with the general objectives of certainty and
efficiency, which underlie this area of the law.
E. Application of the Law to the Facts of
this Case
39
I am of the view that, in the absence of applicable legislation, for
instance s. 46(1) of the Marine Liability Act , the proper
test for a stay of proceedings pursuant to s. 50 of the Federal Court Act to
enforce a forum selection clause in a bill of lading remains as stated in The
“Eleftheria”, which I restate in the following way. Once the court is
satisfied that a validly concluded bill of lading otherwise binds the parties,
the court must grant the stay unless the plaintiff can show sufficiently strong
reasons to support the conclusion that it would not be reasonable or just in
the circumstances to require the plaintiff to adhere to the terms of the
clause. In exercising its discretion, the court should take into account all
of the circumstances of the particular case. See The “Eleftheria”, at
p. 242; Amchem, at pp. 915-22; Holt Cargo, at para. 91. Disputes
arising under or in connection with a contract may not be regarded by a court
in determining whether “strong cause” has been shown that a stay should not be
granted.
40
In this case, the bill of lading and its forum selection clause have
been entered into and are otherwise binding on the parties. The prothonotary
began by properly applying the “strong cause” test. In so doing the
prothonotary weighed the fact that the appellant prefers to litigate in a
familiar jurisdiction and does not bring up the jurisdiction clause merely to
seek a procedural advantage; there are reasonable connections with Belgium; there
are Belgian and French witnesses; any time bar which may preclude the
respondents from bringing their case in Belgium has been waived; no security
has been posted; and the enforcement of a Belgian judgment against the
appellant should present no particular difficulties. The prothonotary also
accepted the respondents’ arguments that there will be Canadian and American
witnesses in these proceedings; the Tribunal de commerce in Antwerp conducts
its proceedings in Flemish and decides cases on the basis of documents and
statements, a procedure precluding witnesses and cross-examination; and, there
may be more delay in Belgium than in Canada, especially if there is an appeal.
The prothonotary concluded that the factors in favour of denying a stay, while
substantial, were just short of the “strong cause” test which the respondents
had the burden of meeting. I see no reason why the prothonotary’s conclusion
on this point should be set aside. However, the prothonotary erred by
subsequently turning his attention to a dispute arising under the bill of
lading and in effect extending the tripartite test for interlocutory
injunctions to motions for a stay of proceedings involving forum selection
clauses contained in bills of lading.
VI. Disposition
41
The prothonotary, to the extent he applied the “tripartite test”, erred
in law, as did the Court of Appeal in concluding that the appropriate test for
a stay of proceedings involving a bill of lading with a forum selection clause
was the “tripartite test” for interlocutory injunctions. The “strong cause”
test does not contemplate an inquiry into the question of establishing whether
the surrounding contract is voidable. Such questions are best left to the
decision maker in the forum agreed upon.
42
Accordingly, I would allow the appeal, overturn the judgments of the
courts below, and issue a stay of proceedings in favour of the appellant, with
costs throughout to the appellant.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Bernard & Partners, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the respondents: Davies, Ward, Phillips
and Vineberg, Montreal.