Date: 20060823
Docket: A-444-04
Citation: 2006 FCA 284
CORAM: DÉCARY
J.A.
EVANS
J.A.
SHARLOW
J.A.
BETWEEN:
OT AFRICA LINE LTD., OT AFRICA LINE,
and the Owners and Charterers and all
others interested
in the Ship “MATHILDE MAERSK”: and in
the Ship “SUZANNE DELMAS”
Appellants
(Defendants)
and
MAGIC SPORTSWEAR CORP. and
BLUE BANANA
Respondents
(Plaintiffs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
EVANS J.A.
A. INTRODUCTION
[1]
Contracts
for the carriage of goods by sea often specify both the exclusive forum for
settling disputes between the shipper and the carrier, and the applicable law. The
High Court, or an arbitrator, in London
is often named as the exclusive forum where any disputes arising from the
contract are to be resolved in accordance with English law. The high cost and
inconvenience of having to litigate a claim for cargo loss in a foreign forum can
deprive Canadian shippers of an effective remedy for a breach of contract by
the carrier, and compel the acceptance of a settlement on terms favourable to
the carrier.
[2]
In 2001,
Parliament addressed this issue by enacting subsection 46(1) of the 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.
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46.
(1) Lorsqu'un contrat de transport de marchandises par eau, non assujetti aux
règles de Hambourg, prévoit le renvoi de toute créance découlant du contrat à
une cour de justice ou à l'arbitrage en un lieu situé à l'étranger, le
réclamant peut, à son choix, intenter une procédure judiciaire ou arbitrale
au Canada devant un tribunal qui serait compétent dans le cas où le contrat
aurait prévu le renvoi de la créance au Canada, si l'une ou l'autre des
conditions suivantes existe :
a) le port de chargement ou de déchargement —
prévu au contrat ou effectif — est situé au Canada;
b) l'autre partie a au Canada sa résidence, un
établissement, une succursale ou une agence;
c) le contrat a été conclu au Canada.
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[3]
This is an
appeal by carriers from an order of a Judge of the Federal Court affirming the
decision of a Prothonotary to dismiss their motion to stay an action by
shippers for damages for the partial loss of cargo. The Prothonotary’s reasons
are reported as Magic Sportswear Corp v. OT Africa Line Ltd, 2003 FC
1513, and the Judge’s as Magic Sportswear Corp v. Mathilde Maersk (The), [2005]
2 F.C.R. 236, 2004 FC 1165.
[4]
The appeal
is about whether the dispute over the alleged cargo loss should be resolved in
the High Court in London, as the contract provides, or
in the Federal Court, which has jurisdiction by virtue of subsection 46(1). It
requires a consideration of two questions. First, to what extent has subsection
46(1) modified private international law principles regarding the Court’s
discretion to decline to exercise its jurisdiction on the ground that another
forum is more appropriate? Second, in making that determination, must the Court
take into account foreign judgments and contractual foreign exclusive forum
clauses?
B. BACKGROUND
[5]
Following
the commencement of the shippers’ action in the Federal Court, the carriers
sought, and obtained, from the High Court in London an anti-suit injunction to
restrain the shippers from litigating their claim in Canada, or elsewhere, in breach of the clause
in the contract specifying the High Court in London as the exclusive forum. Armed with the
English judgment, the carriers brought the motion in the Federal Court to stay
the shippers’ action.
[6]
The
appellants are OT Africa Line Ltd, OT Africa Line, and the owners, charterers and
others interested in the two ships that carried the cargo from New York to Monrovia, Liberia, via Le Havre where it was transhipped. OT
Africa Line Ltd has its head office in London and other offices around the world,
including a branch office in Toronto where it conducts its
business through the agency services of Seabridge International Shipping Inc. I
shall refer to the appellants as “the carriers”.
[7]
The
respondents to the appeal are Magic Sportswear Corporation, a Delaware corporation,
carrying on business in New
York, and Blue
Banana, a Liberian company, carrying on business in Monrovia. They are the shipper and consignee,
respectively, of the allegedly lost cargo and are the plaintiffs in an action
in the Federal Court against the carriers to recover damages for the loss. I
shall refer to the respondents collectively as “the shippers”.
[8]
The
alleged loss was discovered and investigated after the ship carrying the goods
arrived in Monrovia. The litigation is being
pursued at the instigation of the insurers of the cargo who, having paid under
the policy on a claim by the consignee, are exercising their right of
subrogation to the rights of the shippers.
[9]
Like the
shippers, the goods have no connection with Canada. However, the insurers of the cargo are
based in Toronto, where the bill of lading evidencing the contract for the
carriage of the goods was issued on February 5, 2002, and where the ocean
freight was payable to OT Africa Line Ltd.
[10]
The clause
of the conditions to the bill of lading relevant to this appeal provides:
25. LAW AND
JURISDICTION
(1) Any claim
or dispute whatsoever arising in connection with the carriage under the Bill of
Lading shall exclusively be governed by English law and determined by the High
Court in London.
(2) In the
event that anything herein contained is inconsistent with any applicable
international convention or national law which cannot be departed for private
contract the provisions hereof shall to the extent of such inconsistency but no
further be null and void.
[11]
The
chronology of the principal events in the protracted history of this litigation
is as follows:
·
August 1,
2003: the shippers commenced an action in the Federal Court against the
carriers, claiming $30,000.00 for breach of contract for the partial loss of
the cargo;
·
August 15,
2003: notice of the shippers’ action was served on the Toronto office of OT Africa Line Ltd;
·
September
3, 2003: the carriers commenced proceedings in London claiming: (i)
damages against the shippers for commencing an action in the Federal Court in
breach of clause 25 of the conditions to the bill of lading; (ii)
damages from the cargo insurers for inducing the breach of contract; (iii)
an anti-suit injunction against the shippers and their insurers to restrain
them from breaching clause 25 by pursuing their action in the Federal Court,
and from commencing any other proceedings for the alleged cargo loss anywhere
other than in London; and (iv) a declaration that the carriers were not
liable for the alleged partial loss of the cargo;
·
September
8, 2003: the carriers obtained an interim anti-suit injunction from Gross J., a
Judge of the High Court in London, on an ex parte motion
of which the shippers had short notice;
·
September
9, 2003: the carriers filed a motion in the Federal Court to stay the shippers’
action against them;
·
October
28, 2003: at the instance of their insurers, the shippers filed an
acknowledgement of service indicating their intention to contest the
jurisdiction of the High Court, but subsequently made no jurisdiction
application;
·
December
15, 2003: Prothonotary Milczynski of the Federal Court issued an oral order
dismissing the carriers’ motion for an order staying the shippers’ action against
them in the Federal Court for damages for the partial loss of the cargo.
Written reasons were issued on December 22, 2003;
·
April 5,
2004: Cooke J. of the English High Court gave the carriers leave to join the
shippers’ insurers as parties to the English proceedings, to serve them in Canada, and to amend the claim
accordingly;
·
August 23,
2004: O’Keefe J. of the Federal Court dismissed the carriers’ appeal from the
order of the Prothonotary refusing the stay;
·
November
3, 2004: an anti-suit injunction against the shippers was issued by Langley J.,
a Judge of the Commercial Court of the High Court in London. His reasons are reported at [2004] EWHC
2441 (Comm.);
·
June 13,
2005: the English Court of Appeal dismissed the shippers’ appeal from the issue
of the anti-suit injunction. The Court’s reasons are reported at [2005] EWCA
710;
·
June 15,
2005: the carriers’ appeal to this Court from the order of O’Keefe J. was
adjourned pending the disposition of the shippers’ petition to the House of
Lords for leave to appeal the order of the English Court of Appeal upholding
the anti-suit injunction;
·
December
9, 2005; the House of Lords dismissed the petition for leave to appeal; and
·
June 21, 2006:
this Court heard the carriers’ appeal.
C.
THE ISSUES AND THE PARTIES’ POSITIONS
[12]
Although the
shippers are seeking a relatively small amount in damages for the cargo loss, the
case raises issues of principle potentially affecting hundreds of similar
claims. The question in dispute concerns the appropriate forum for litigating
the claim and involves a conflict of laws.
[13]
English
law, the proper law of the contract in this case, regards the parties’ contractual
choice of forum as virtually conclusive. In contrast, subsection 46(1) permits
a party to institute proceedings in Canada for breach of contract, despite the
presence of a clause nominating a foreign court as the exclusive forum for the
resolution of disputes under the contract, provided that the claimant establishes
that the parties or the contract have one of the statutorily specified
connections to Canada.
[14]
In the
present case, subsection 46(1) confers jurisdiction on the Federal Court over
the shippers’ claim against the carriers because the contract was made in
Canada and the carriers have a place of business in Canada. The appeal raises two issues concerning
the exercise of that jurisdiction.
[15]
First,
does subsection 46(1) remove the discretion of the Federal Court and the
Federal Court of Appeal to grant a stay pursuant to subsection 50(1) of the Federal
Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7, even if another jurisdiction is a more
convenient forum (the forum non conveniens doctrine) than Canada? The carriers
say that it does not, while the shippers say that it does.
[16]
As
relevant to this appeal, the Federal Courts Act provides as follows:
50.
(1) The Federal Court of Appeal or the Federal 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.
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50.
(1) La Cour d'appel fédérale et la Cour fédérale ont le pouvoir
discrétionnaire de suspendre les procédures dans toute affaire :
a) au motif que la demande est en instance
devant un autre tribunal;
b) lorsque, pour quelque autre raison,
l'intérêt de la justice l'exige.
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[17]
Second, if
subsection 46(1) does not deprive the Court of its discretion to stay
proceedings when it is the less convenient forum, what weight, if any, should the
Court give in its forum non conveniens analysis to the parties’
contractual choice of forum and to the judgments asserting the jurisdiction of
the English High Court over the dispute by virtue of the exclusive jurisdiction
clause?
[18]
The carriers
say that the principles of comity and freedom of contract, commercial
certainty, and the desirability of avoiding parallel proceedings in Canada and England, require that these factors be afforded considerable
weight. The shippers, on the other hand, say that to give the exclusive
jurisdiction clause and the English judgments any weight would defeat the
purpose of subsection 46(1) of the Marine Liability Act by depriving them
of their statutory right to litigate in Canada, despite the foreign exclusive
jurisdiction clause in the contract.
[19]
For the
reasons which follow, I am of the opinion that the carriers are right and that
the shippers’ action in the Federal Court should be stayed. Accordingly, I
would allow the carriers’ appeal.
C. ANALYSIS
Issue 1: Standard of review
[20]
The bases
upon which this Court may set aside a decision of the Federal Court respecting
a motion for a stay were clearly articulated by Décary J.A. in Jian Sheng
Co. v. Great Tempo S.A., [1998] 3 F.C. 418 (C.A.) at para. 12:
In reviewing a discretionary
decision of a Motions Judge upon an application to stay proceedings on the
basis of a jurisdiction clause, a court of appeal must uphold the decision
unless it was arrived at on a wrong basis or was plainly a wrong decision (see The
"Seapearl" [Seapearl (The Ship M/V) v. Seven Seas Dry Cargo
Shipping Corporation of Santiago, Chile, [1982] 2 F.C. 161 (C.A.)] at 176,
Pratte J.A.). A similar standard of review is to be applied by a Motions Judge
in an appeal from a prothonotary's order of this kind (see Canada v.
Aqua-Gem Investments Ltd., [1993] 2 F.C. 425 at 454 (C.A.)). This
Court may therefore interfere only if the Motions Judge had no grounds to
interfere with the Prothonotary's decision or, in the event such grounds
existed, if her own decision was arrived at on a wrong basis or was plainly a
wrong decision.
[21]
In the
present case, the issues raised on appeal are questions of law. The first
question of law is whether subsection 46(1) removes the Court’s discretion to
decline to exercise its jurisdiction on the ground that it is not the more
convenient forum. If the subsection does not remove the Court’s discretion to
order a stay, a second question of law arises, namely, whether any weight
should be given to the exclusive jurisdiction clause and to the English judgments
asserting jurisdiction over the dispute.
[22]
If the
Court below was wrong on either of these issues, it exercised its discretion on
a wrong basis, and this Court is warranted in setting aside the order and substituting
its own.
Issue 2: Does subsection
46(1) of the Marine Liability Act remove the Court’s jurisdiction under
section 50 of the Federal Courts Act to stay the shippers’ proceeding in
the Federal Court if it is forum non conveniens?
[23]
For
convenience, I set out again subsection 46(1), which lies at the heart of this
appeal.
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.
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46.
(1) Lorsqu'un contrat de transport de marchandises par eau, non assujetti aux
règles de Hambourg, prévoit le renvoi de toute créance découlant du contrat à
une cour de justice ou à l'arbitrage en un lieu situé à l'étranger, le
réclamant peut, à son choix, intenter une procédure judiciaire ou arbitrale
au Canada devant un tribunal qui serait compétent dans le cas où le contrat
aurait prévu le renvoi de la créance au Canada, si l'une ou l'autre des
conditions suivantes existe :
a) le port de chargement ou de déchargement —
prévu au contrat ou effectif — est situé au Canada;
b) l'autre partie a au Canada sa résidence, un
établissement, une succursale ou une agence;
c) le contrat a été conclu au Canada.
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[24]
It is
common ground that this provision confers jurisdiction on the Federal Court
over the shippers’ claim in this case. First, the Hamburg Rules (the United
Nations Convention on the Carriage of Goods by Sea, 1978, 30 March 1978,
1695 U.N.T.S. 3), which came into effect internationally on November 1,
1993, when 20 countries ratified or acceded to them, do not apply, and
the contract directs the adjudication of claims arising under it to a court
outside Canada. Second, two of the statutory factors connecting the dispute
with Canada are satisfied: the defendant to the claim, OT Africa Line Ltd, has
a place of business in Canada (paragraph 46(1)(b)),
and the contract for the carriage of goods was made in Canada (paragraph 46(1)(c)). Third, the
Federal Court would be competent to determine the claim if the contract had
referred it to Canada.
[25]
The
shippers argue that subsection 46(1) not only confers jurisdiction on the
Federal Court over the dispute, but also directs the Court to exercise its
jurisdiction, without considering whether it, or the High Court in London, is the more convenient forum
for litigating it. Accordingly, they say, the Federal Court was wrong to decide
otherwise. I disagree for the following three reasons.
[26]
First, subsection
46(1) does not state that, once one of the jurisdictional criteria in
subsection 46(1) is present, the court in which the claimant has elected to
proceed must exercise its jurisdiction. The subsection merely provides that,
when it applies, a claimant may institute proceedings in a court in Canada that
would have jurisdiction if the contract had referred the claim to Canada. It gives no directive to the
court in Canada in which the claimant elects
to proceed respecting that court’s exercise of its jurisdiction.
[27]
Second, subsection
46(1) does not expressly remove the broad discretion of the Federal Court and the
Federal Court of Appeal under subsection 50(1) of the Federal Courts Act
to stay a proceeding over which they have jurisdiction, but where “the claim is
being proceeded with in another jurisdiction” or a stay “is in the interests of
justice”. In my opinion, it requires more specific language than that in
section 46 to remove from the Courts a power fundamental to their ability to
control their own process.
[28]
Third, it
would produce anomalous results to interpret subsection 46(1) as implicitly
removing the Federal Courts’ discretion in deciding to stay on the ground that
another court is the more convenient forum.
[29]
Suppose,
for example, that, in this case, in addition to the English choice of law and
exclusive forum clauses, the contract had provided for the carriage of the
cargo from New York to London, the bill of lading had been issued in London, and
the loss of the cargo was alleged to have occurred in London, where all the
witnesses resided.
[30]
Since all
these connecting factors favour litigating the dispute in a competing forum, England, it would make no sense to
require the Federal Court to decide the dispute, simply because it has
jurisdiction under subsection 46(1) on the ground that the carrier has an
office in Toronto. And, if proceedings had
already been commenced in England, to interpret the legislation
as precluding a Canadian court from subsequently considering whether it was the
less convenient forum would require the court to exclude considerations of
international comity.
[31]
It would
also be odd to conclude that subsection 46(1) requires a court in Canada to
decide a dispute because the parties had agreed to a forum outside Canada,
whereas if the contract had contained no exclusive jurisdiction clause, a court
in Canada would have declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that it
was not the more convenient forum.
[32]
Counsel
for the shippers argues that this Court is bound by precedent deciding that
subsection 46(1) not only confers jurisdiction on a court in Canada where a
claimant elects to proceed, but also requires the court to exercise it. He
relies in particular on the following paragraphs in the reasons of Justice
Bastarache when writing for the Supreme Court of Canada in Z.I. Pompey
Industrie v. ECU-Line N.V., [2003] 1 S.C.R. 450, 2003 SCC 27:
[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.
[33]
Although
the meaning of these passages may not be beyond dispute, I do not agree with
counsel’s interpretation of them. In my view, Justice Bastarache was saying
that, when one of the statutory conditions for jurisdiction is satisfied,
subsection 46(1) removes the court’s discretion to stay proceedings solely because
of a foreign forum selection clause. Justice Bastarache was thus not addressing
the question in our case, namely, whether subsection 46(1) also removes the
Court’s discretion to order a stay when, taking all relevant considerations
into account, it is not the more convenient forum.
[34]
I
interpret in the same manner the passage in the reasons given for this Court by
Nadon J.A. in Incremona-Salerno Marmi Affini Siciliani (I.S.M.A.S) s.n.c. v.
Castor (The), [2003] 3 F.C. 220, 2002 FCA 479 at para. 13 and referred to
above by Justice Bastarache.
[35]
Counsel for
the shippers also suggested that subsection 46(1) would be largely redundant if
it was not interpreted as removing the Federal Court’s discretion to grant a
stay on the ground that it was not the more convenient forum. Again, I do not
agree.
[36]
First, subsection
46(1) affirms the Court’s jurisdiction by specifying that claimants who satisfy
one of the three connecting factors set out in paragraphs (a), (b),
and (c) may pursue their claim in Canada, despite a contractual foreign exclusive
jurisdiction clause. Second, the statutory bases of jurisdiction are simpler to
apply than the common law’s “real and substantial connection” test for
determining whether the Court has jurisdiction over a claim and, arguably, more
easily satisfied. Third, it removes the Court’s discretion to stay solely on
the ground that the parties have selected an exclusive forum outside Canada.
[37]
Accordingly,
like the Federal Court Judge, I agree with the Prothonotary’s analysis (at
para. 16 of her reasons) on this issue: see also Ford Aquitaine Industries SAS v. Canmar Pride
(The), [2005]
4 F.C.R. 441, 2005 FC 431 at paras. 38-40. Thus, while subsection 46(1) confers
jurisdiction on the Federal Court over the shippers’ claim for the partial cargo
loss, it is still necessary to decide if the Federal Court or the High Court in
London is the more convenient forum in order to determine if the carriers’
motion for a stay should be granted.
Issue 3: Did the Federal
Court err in exercising its discretion under section 50 of the Federal
Courts Act to refuse to stay the shippers’ action, on the ground that it was
not the less convenient forum?
(i) The English judgments
(a) the attornment issue
[38]
The forum
non conveniens analysis conducted by the Federal Court appears to have
given no weight to the interim anti-suit injunction issued ex parte by
Justice Gross in the High Court in London,
on the ground that the shippers had not attorned to the jurisdiction of the
English court.
[39]
The
Prothonotary principally based her rejection of the argument that the shippers
had attorned on the ground of an annotation to the English Civil Procedure
Rules. She also mentioned the possible existence of practical reasons why the
shippers did not contest the court’s jurisdiction. On appeal, the Judge of the
Federal Court agreed. In my respectful opinion, they were in error in discounting
the English judgement on the ground of non-attornment.
[40]
The law of
a foreign jurisdiction is a question of fact to be determined on the basis of
the evidence before the court. The record before the Prothonotary included an
uncontradicted affidavit from Sean Gibbons, an English solicitor and a partner
in the firm acting on behalf of the carriers in the English proceeding for an
anti-suit injunction.
[41]
Mr Gibbons
explained in the affidavit that, after Justice Gross had issued the anti-suit
injunction, the shippers’ English solicitors filed two acknowledgements of
service with the Commercial
Court indicating
that they intended to contest the jurisdiction of the English courts over the cargo
claim. However, they failed to bring an application to contest the jurisdiction
within the 28 days prescribed in the rules of the Commercial Court.
[42]
Mr Gibbons
further stated that the effect of Part 11(5) of the English Civil
Procedure Rules is that, having failed to contest the jurisdiction of the
court within the time specified after filing their acknowledgement of service,
the shippers were to be treated in English law as having accepted that the
court had jurisdiction to try the claim. The reasons of Justice Langley (at
para. 11), which were rendered after the decisions of the Prothonotary and the
Federal Court, confirm Mr Gibbons’ view of the law in England on this issue.
[43]
Having
concluded that the Federal Court’s refusal to attach weight to the anti-suit
injunction was based on a misapprehension of the evidence, I must consider de
novo whether weight should be given in the forum non conveniens
analysis to the English decisions, including the decisions of Justice Langley
and the English Court of Appeal, which were not available to the Federal Court.
(b) Commercial Court
[44]
Sitting in
the Commercial
Court, Justice
Langley had the benefit of the reasons of both the Prothonotary and the Federal
Court Judge. The issues in the Commercial Court most relevant to the present
appeal were whether (i) the carriers’ proceeding in the English High Court
should be stayed in view of the action already commenced by the shippers in the
Federal Court, and (ii) the carriers’ anti-suit injunction against the shippers
should be continued or discharged, and a similar injunction issued against their
insurers.
[45]
On the
first issue, he stated that English courts normally give effect to contractual
exclusive jurisdiction clauses, in the absence of “strong reasons” for not so
doing. Accordingly, he reasoned (at para. 33), it would take “some exceptional
justification” to stay the English proceedings when the parties had selected
the High Court in London as the exclusive forum for resolving disputes arising
from the contract.
[46]
Justice
Langley declined to depart from the rule of English private international law
that parties’ contractual selection of the exclusive forum is normally
determinative. He found the connections with Canada relied on by the shippers (the place
where the contract was made, ocean freight was payable, and the carriers had an
office) to be minor and not relevant to the issues arising from the cargo
claim. Hence, apart from the effect of subsection 46(1), which he termed “the
overriding issue”, he concluded that the shippers had not made out a case for
an order staying the carriers’ action in England.
[47]
Justice
Langley regarded subsection 46(1) as relevant to the request for a stay of the
English proceedings, as well as to the anti-suit injunction restraining the
shippers from proceeding with their claim in another forum. He stated that, on
both issues, the question was whether the subsection constituted “strong
reasons” for not giving effect to the exclusive jurisdiction clause. He
concluded (at para. 41) that:
… there is insufficient
logic in treating section 46 as giving rise to some exceptional circumstance
beyond the usual case where a party seeks to proceed in another court, relying
on the principles by which that court is guided in the exercise of its own
jurisdiction, and does so despite an exclusive jurisdiction clause binding upon
that party. In such circumstances, English law is, I think, settled at the
highest level that an anti-suit injunction should be granted essentially to
ensure that the parties abide by the agreement they have made.
(c) Court of Appeal
[48]
In more
elaborate reasons, Lord Justice Longmore defined the crucial issue (at para.
15) as the extent to which, when deciding whether to stay the carriers’
proceeding, the English court should have regard to subsection 46(1) and to the
judgments of the Federal Court refusing to stay the shippers’ action. He noted
that, in enacting section 46, Parliament had adopted a provision respecting exclusive
jurisdiction clauses similar to Article 21 of the Hamburg Rules, which Canada had not yet implemented in its
domestic law.
[49]
He held
that, under English private international law, the conflict between subsection
46(1) and the common law rule respecting exclusive jurisdiction clauses was to
be resolved by the proper law governing the interpretation and enforcement of the
contract. The parties had agreed that any disputes arising from the contract
were to be determined by English law, and English conflict of laws rules permit
parties to specify the proper law of the contract. Accordingly, he reasoned,
English private international law required the Court to give effect to the
exclusive jurisdiction clause in this case, in the absence of strong reasons
for not so doing.
[50]
Lord
Justice Longmore regarded section 46 as an insufficient basis for staying the carriers’
English proceedings, on the ground that (at para. 24):
… no English court would
expect a foreign court to grant a stay by reason of any provision of English
law, if an action was proceeding in that foreign court by virtue of an
agreement, governed by the law of that court, that proceedings were to be
brought in the courts of that country. Conversely, an English court would hope
that a decision to restrain an action brought in England, pursuant to
an exclusive jurisdiction clause in a contract governed by English law, would
be respected by any foreign court.
[51]
For
similar reasons, he was prepared to reinforce the refusal of a stay with an
anti-suit injunction, stating that this was not an attack on the Canadian Parliament
or courts because it only restrained the shippers if they elected to pursue the
proceeding in Canada in breach of the contract.
Moreover, he added, granting the injunction would help to avoid the unattractive
prospect of parallel proceedings on the same claim, with the potential for different
results.
[52]
In
concurring reasons, Lord Justice Rix said (at para. 54) that the principles
governing the exercise by the English courts of their residual discretion not to
give effect to a contractual exclusive jurisdiction clause “if the interests of
justice demand otherwise” are analogous to those respecting the identification
of the more convenient forum. Turning to subsection 46(1), he noted that the
Federal Court had not treated the exclusive jurisdiction clause as a factor in
its forum non conveniens analysis.
[53]
Lord
Justice Rix considered the argument advanced by the shippers that subsection
46(1) reflected a growing international consensus, evidenced by the Hamburg
Rules, respecting exclusive jurisdiction clauses. The argument was that considerations
of international comity militated against granting the anti-suit injunction, as
an exception to the common law principle giving primacy to party autonomy in
the selection of an exclusive forum.
[54]
One of the
grounds on which Lord Justice Rix rejected this argument was a statement by Justice
Sopinka in Amchem Products Inc v. British Columbia (Workers’ Compensation Board),
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 897 at 934, to the effect that, as a matter of comity, a
Canadian court would respect a decision of a foreign court to assume
jurisdiction over a matter on the basis of principles broadly conforming to
those of Canadian private international law. Conversely, a Canadian court would
not respect a decision of a foreign court to assume jurisdiction on a basis which
was inconsistent with those principles and would expose a potential litigant in
a Canadian court to an injustice.
[55]
Lord
Justice Rix inferred (at para. 81) from Justice Sopinka’s reasons that Canadian
law “would also understand without offence” the anti-suit injunction granted in
this case by the courts in England, applying the proper law of the contract, to
restrain the shippers from seeking a remedy in Canada, where, as an exception
to the rule normally applied in Canada, legislation directs Canadian courts not
to give effect to a foreign exclusive jurisdiction clause agreed to by the
parties.
(ii) Subsection 46(1)
[56]
On the
basis of submissions to the Parliamentary Committees, and statements made in
the House of Commons Debates, it would appear that section 46 of the Marine
Liability Act was primarily enacted to protect Canadian exporters and
importers from having to litigate claims against carriers in a foreign forum where
the expense may be prohibitive. When applicable, section 46 provides a litigant
with the option of pursuing a claim in a competent court in Canada, despite the exclusive
foreign jurisdiction clause in the contract of carriage.
[57]
Particular
concern was expressed in the parliamentary proceedings that small to medium-sized
Canadian shippers and consignees do not have as much bargaining power as large
ship owners in the negotiation of the terms of the contract: exclusive jurisdiction
clauses are normally inserted in the interests of the carrier. Since Canada is a significant trading
nation, the interests of Canadian exporters and importers are a matter of
legitimate public concern.
[58]
Thus, in
his submissions to the House of Commons Standing Committee considering a Bill
containing what became section 46, Mr James Gould, the then President of the
Canadian Maritime Law Association, stated that the Association supported the
clause because
… it provides Canadian
claimants with an option – and it’s just that, an option – to sue or arbitrate
in Canada in circumstances in which there is a substantial connection with Canada. It would
provide an advantage to Canadian exporters and importers whose only other
option might be to abandon their claims or sue or arbitrate claims in a foreign
jurisdiction.
Particularly, advancing
low or medium-sized claims can be subject to very significant inconvenience and
disproportionate cost if one is forced to litigate or arbitrate in a foreign
jurisdiction.
If the jurisdiction
clause [i.e. section 46] is not retained, the present situation will
continue, keeping Canadian importers and exporters at a significant
disadvantage, I think, and that would only benefit foreign shipowners and
operators.
(Canada, House of
Commons, Evidence of the Standing Committee on Transport and Government
Operations, (27 March 2001) at 1205)
And, in an exchange with a representative of ship-owning
interests, Mr Marcel Proulx, M.P. said:
I assume that clause 46
was included to avoid situations where Canadian consumers, regardless of their
size, would have to incur exorbitant costs to defend or institute proceedings
against one of your clients abroad. That must be the reason, at least in part,
for this provision.
(Canada, House of
Commons, Evidence of the Standing Committee on Transport and Government
Operations, (27 March 2001) at 1140)
It is clear from the exchange that “Canadian consumers” refers
to Canadian shippers of goods.
[59]
The
position of the proponents of section 46 was well captured in the House of
Commons by Mr Norman Doyle, M.P. who said:
Indeed, a culture has
grown up that sees most of these disputes resolved in British boardrooms and in
British courts. That suits the big shipping lines and the British legal profession
just fine. However, I would submit that a small Canadian exporter would be badly
outclassed going up against the big boys in that kind of a setting.
(House of Commons
Debates, 37th Parliament, 1st Session, No. 058, May 9,
2001, at 1645)
[60]
Some of the
above statements may need to be read in light of the fact that shippers
generally insure the cargo and that, as in the present case, the insurers are
the real litigants. Nonetheless, the principal policy objective of section 46 would
be advanced if insurers of the goods of Canadian shippers and consignees were
not forced by an exclusive jurisdiction clause to exercise their subrogated
rights outside Canada.
[61]
Allowing insurers
to sue in Canada may reduce the cost of
litigation and thus improve their prospects of recouping the amount paid on a
claim by the shippers or consignees. In theory, these reduced costs of doing
business should be reflected in the premiums payable by Canadian shippers or
consignees, thereby either making Canadian exports more competitive or reducing
the final price paid by the consumer in Canada for imported goods.
[62]
Section 46
should also be seen in an international context. It was described in the parliamentary
proceedings as moving Canada closer to adopting in
domestic law the Hamburg Rules which provide a uniform international
legal framework for the carriage of goods by sea. The Hamburg Rules are
given the force of law in Canada by Schedule 4, of the Marine
Liability Act. However, this Schedule only comes into force on a
date to be fixed by the Governor in Council on the recommendation of the
Minister of Transport, who must consider the question every five years: section
44. No date has been fixed yet.
[63]
Section 46
is similar, but not identical, to Article 21 of the Hamburg Rules. For example, Article 21 permits a claimant
to commence proceedings in a forum on the ground that the defendant has a place
of business in the jurisdiction but, unlike section 46, only if that is the
defendant’s principal place of business or, failing that, habitual residence.
[64]
Provisions
analogous to section 46 have been enacted by other countries, including Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, the four Nordic countries of
Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden, and the People’s Republic of
China, which have not implemented
the Hamburg Rules in their domestic law.
[65]
While section
46 is designed to redress a perceived power imbalance between ship owners and
shippers by favouring shippers, it only does so to the extent of providing
claimants with the option of instituting proceedings in a Canadian forum. It
does not require them to litigate in Canada.
[66]
Unlike legislation
in Australia (Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 1991, subsection 11(2)) and New Zealand (Maritime Transport Act,
1994, subsection 210(1)), section 46 does not state that foreign exclusive
jurisdiction clauses are null and void or of no effect when there is a
specified Canadian connection. Nor, as already noted, does section 46 direct a
court in Canada to exercise its statutory jurisdiction
when the claimant establishes one of the statutory connecting factors.
(iii) Clause 25 of the contract
[67]
Two points
should be made here. First, the provision in clause 25(1) naming English law as
the law applicable to disputes arising under it is unaffected by section 46,
which deals only with foreign exclusive jurisdiction clauses.
[68]
Second, clause
25(2) provides that any provision in the contract which is “inconsistent with
any applicable international convention or national law which cannot be
departed for [sic] private contract” shall, to that extent, be null and
void. However, this provision does not apply in this case.
[69]
The
adjective “applicable” qualifies “national law” as well as “international
convention”. In this context, “applicable national law” refers to the proper
law of the contract. This terminology is found in Article 4 of the EEC’s Convention
on the Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations (80/934/EEC) (the “Rome
Convention”), which was largely incorporated into the law of the United Kingdom by the Contracts
(Applicable Law) Act, 1990. English law is the “proper” or “applicable”
national law governing the contract in the present case by virtue of clause
25(1), and there is no material inconsistency between that law and the
contract.
(iv) Conclusions
(a) the English judgments
[70]
Three
principal considerations favour a Canadian court’s treating the English
judgments as relevant in a forum non conveniens analysis: international
comity, the avoidance of parallel proceedings on the same matter, and problems
of recognition in the event that the parallel proceedings produce different
results. Minimising litigation, with its attendant costs and complications, is
good public policy.
[71]
It may
seem somewhat odd to suggest that the Federal Court should take the English judgments
into account in a forum non conveniens analysis in this case. After all,
the English courts refused to stay the carriers’ English proceedings without,
apparently, giving any weight to the judgments of the Federal Court refusing a
stay to the carriers on the ground that it had not been demonstrated to be forum
non conveniens. Comity should be a two-way street.
[72]
Two considerations
may alleviate this concern. First, if the English judgments are relevant in the
forum non conveniens analysis, as on the facts of this case I conclude
that they are, I have treated them as only one of several factors to be taken
into account in determining how the interests of justice, practicality, and
efficiency are best served. Second, the English courts extended comity to the
Canadian Parliament’s enactment of subsection 46(1) in that they were very mindful
of the delicate problem that it posed, even though, having carefully considered
the subsection, the English courts decided that it did not represent “strong
reasons” for departing from the normal rule that exclusive jurisdiction
selection clauses should be given effect.
[73]
It may
also be said in support of the shippers’ position that if the carriers in this
case end up having to conduct litigation on the same issues in both England and Canada, they will have been the authors of
their own misfortune. They could have defended the shippers’ action in the
Federal Court, instead of commencing their own, subsequent, proceeding in London. However, in commencing a
proceeding in London, the carriers were merely
exercising a valid contractual right for which they had bargained.
[74]
As noted
at paragraph 54 of these reasons, the approach of Canadian law to comity in the
context of identifying the more convenient forum was authoritatively stated by the
Supreme Court of Canada in Amchem Products at 913-15. In the present case,
the question is whether the English courts have, in the words of Justice
Sopinka (at 915),
departed from our own
test of forum conveniens to such an extent as to justify our courts in
refusing to respect the assumption of jurisdiction by the foreign court and in
what circumstances such assumption amounts to a serious injustice.
[75]
Section 46
aside, a Canadian court could normally be expected to have reached the same conclusion
as the English court. That is, if the applicable law of the contract had been
Canadian, a court in Canada would, in the absence of strong reasons, have given
effect to a clause in the contract specifying a court in Canada as the exclusive
forum, in the interests of commercial certainty and on the basis of the principle
of party autonomy in determining the terms of the contract: see Amchem
at 921, and Z.I. Pompey at para. 20.
[76]
Parenthetically,
I note that the Supreme Court of the United States has moved closer to the
position at common law in England and Canada by regarding foreign exclusive
jurisdiction clauses as presumptively valid: Vimar Seguros y Reaseguros S.A.
v. M/V Sky Reefer, 515 U.S. 528 (1995); see further Robert Force and Martin
Davies, “Forum Selection Clauses in International Maritime Contracts” in Martin
Davies (ed.), Jurisdiction and Forum Selection in International Maritime Law
(The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2005) at 4-8; and William Tetley,
“Jurisdiction Clauses and Forum Non Conveniens in the Carriage of Goods by Sea”,
ibid. at 24-38.
[77]
Not every
difference between Canadian law and foreign law on the appropriate forum for
adjudicating a dispute will warrant a refusal by a court in Canada, when conducting a forum non
conveniens analysis, to respect the assertion of jurisdiction by a foreign
court. The question is whether the modification made to Canadian private
international law by section 46 is of such significance as to exclude, on the
facts of the present case, considerations of comity and the practical problems
to which parallel proceedings may give rise.
[78]
In my
view, the critical facts of this case are that the shippers, the consignees,
the goods, and the ports of loading and discharge, have no connection to Canada. It is true that section 46
confers jurisdiction on a competent Canadian court over the shippers’ claim, since
OT Africa Line Ltd has a “place of business, branch or
agency” in Canada, and the contract was made
here. However, it is also relevant to ask whether it would frustrate the policy
underlying section 46 for a Canadian court, on the facts of this case, to afford
some respect to the English courts’ judgments by factoring them into a forum
non conveniens analysis.
[79]
The
principal policy objective of section 46 is the protection of the interests of
Canadian exporters and importers, and, I would add, their insurers, by
diminishing or eliminating the legal effect of a contractual clause requiring
them to litigate any dispute in a foreign forum. The legislative record does
not suggest that Parliament was also concerned to protect the interests of
Canadian insurers when insuring non-Canadian goods shipped from and to ports
outside Canada by non-Canadian shippers.
[80]
While
section 46 preserves the jurisdiction of Canadian courts in proceedings brought
by foreign shippers and consignees, it does not follow that, in deciding whether
to exercise its jurisdiction, a court should depart from its normal practice of
affording respect to foreign judgments. On the facts of the present case, including
the dominant role being played in the litigation by the Canadian insurers of
the cargo, it would not frustrate Parliament’s purpose to take the English
judgments into account in the course of determining the more convenient forum.
[81]
In short, section
46 does not expressly provide that, when determining whether it is the more
convenient forum, a Canadian court in which a claimant elects to proceed should
assign no weight to the assertion of jurisdiction by a foreign court, which it
has supported by an anti-suit injunction. Nor can it be said that Parliament
implicitly so directed in a fact situation such as this, where, to give a
foreign judgment weight, would not frustrate the policies underlying section
46.
[82]
Nor do I
think it fatal to the application of the comity principle that the shippers had
commenced proceedings in Canada before the carriers sought an anti-suit
injunction in England, since, in so doing, they
were merely exercising their contractual rights according to the proper law of
the contract. In any event, the shippers have not indicated whether they
propose to pursue their action in the Federal Court in breach of the anti-suit
injunction issued against them in England.
Moreover, to attach much significance to which party is the first to file
proceedings may simply result in rewarding the party who obtains judgment
first: Westec Aerospace Inc. v. Raytheon Aircraft Co. (1999), 173 D.L.R.
(4th) 498 (B.C. C.A.) at para. 40.
[83]
In my
opinion, in the circumstances of this case, section 46 has not ousted the
principles of international comity set out in Amchem Products.
Accordingly, weight should be given to the English judgments asserting their
jurisdiction in order to determine if, compared to the High Court in London, the Federal Court is forum
non conveniens.
(b) clause 25(1)
[84]
For
similar reasons, to give weight in this case to the parties’ choice of forum is
not inconsistent with the policy underlying section 46. If Parliament had intended
to invalidate exclusive jurisdiction clauses for all purposes, it could have declared
them to be void or of no effect, as, for example, the Australian and New Zealand statutes do.
[85]
The
freedom of parties in international trade to determine the terms of their
contracts is a fundamental, but not absolute, tenet of Canadian commercial law
and has been recognized internationally in Article 3 of the Rome Convention.
Indeed in another context, Prothonotary Hargrave has stated that subsection
46(1) should be strictly construed because it limits contractual freedom: Dongnan
Oil & Fats Co. v. Chemex Ltd. (2004), 264 F.T.R. 264, 2004
FC 1732 at para. 17.
[86]
Hence, in
the absence of either express words or an implication necessary to give effect
to the policy underlying section 46, I would include the parties’ exclusive
jurisdiction clause in the factors to be considered in the forum non
conveniens analysis. No mention is made of this issue in the reasons of the
Federal Court.
[87]
As I have
already noted, this case does not involve Canadian shippers or Canadian goods,
but a claim subrogated to Canadian insurers in respect of foreign shippers and
foreign goods. In my opinion, it would not frustrate the policy of section 46
if weight was given in this case, for forum non conveniens purposes, to
the exclusive jurisdiction clause, as well as to the English judgments.
[88]
For the
purpose of disposing of this appeal, I need not decide whether the assumption
of jurisdiction by the English courts and the parties’ choice of an exclusive
forum should be regarded as not only relevant factors in the forum conveniens
analysis, but also virtually conclusive. Nor do I have to decide whether these
factors should be given weight when the shippers, the consignees or the goods are
Canadian. However, I am inclined to think that they should not, since that would
permit litigants to frustrate the policy of section 46 of protecting Canadian
exporters and importers, by instituting proceedings in the forum specified in
the contract.
(c) forum non conveniens
[89]
Having
concluded that, as a matter of law, the English judgments and the choice of
forum clause must be taken into account in the forum non conveniens
analysis, I must now consider whether the Federal Court is forum non
conveniens.
[90]
On the
facts of this case, Liberia would appear to provide the most
“natural” forum for the adjudication of the shippers’ claim, since the alleged
loss was reported, and investigated, after the ship docked there and it is
where most of the witnesses appear to reside. However, it does not follow from
this that another jurisdiction, England,
may not provide a more appropriate forum than the Federal Court.
[91]
Since the
Federal Court has assumed jurisdiction over the shippers’ claim, the burden is
on the carriers to show that they should be granted a stay on the ground of forum
non conveniens: Amchem Products at 921; Ford Aquitaine Industries
at para. 71. However, in view of the parties’ selection of the applicable law
and the forum, a finding of forum non conveniens may not be made so
reluctantly as it often now appears to be in the absence of such clauses: see
Jeffrey A. Talpis and Shelley J. Kath, “The Exceptional as Commonplace in
Québec Forum Non Conveniens Law” (2000), 34 R.J.T. 761 at 790-94.
[92]
I adopt
the list of connecting factors relevant to a forum non conveniens inquiry
set out in Spar Aerospace Ltd v. American Mobile Satellite Corp, [2002]
4 S.C.R. 205, 2002 SCC 78 at para. 71.
(a) residence of the
parties, witnesses and experts: OT Africa Line Ltd, the principal defendant
in the Federal Court action, has its head office in England, and a branch
office in Toronto. Neither the shipper nor the
consignee, the nominal plaintiffs, resides in England or Canada. While not technically parties to the
Federal Court action, the insurers of the cargo are the “true” plaintiffs and
reside in Toronto. Most of the witnesses appear
to be in Monrovia, although OT Africa Line Ltd says that an employee whom it
will probably call to testify resides in London. There is no evidence respecting the
residence of the officers and crew of the ships that carried the goods from New York to Monrovia.
(b) the location of the
material evidence: presumably in Liberia.
(c) place where the
contract was negotiated and executed: the contract was made, and the ocean
freight paid, in Canada. In other respects, the
contract was performed outside Canada and England.
(d) existence of
proceedings pending between the parties in another jurisdiction: the
carriers’ action for a declaration and damages against the shippers and the
insurers is pending in London, thus raising the possibility
of parallel proceedings and conflicting decisions if the shippers’ claim is
allowed to proceed in the Federal Court. While the carriers commenced their litigation
in London after the shippers’
instituted their action in the Federal Court, the carriers were exercising
their contractual rights in accordance with the proper law of the contract.
(e) location of the
defendant’s assets: OT Africa Line Ltd keeps its corporate records, books,
and accounts in England. While it has a branch office
in Toronto, there is no evidence that any
assets are located there.
(f) applicable law:
English law. Neither party attached significance in this context to clause 24
of the contract of carriage. As relevant to the facts, clause 24 states that,
where the bill of lading covers the transportation of goods to or from ports in
the United States, it is subject to the United States’ Carriage of Goods by Sea
Act, which is incorporated into the contract.
(g) advantages conferred on
the plaintiff by its choice of forum: the saving of expense for the
shippers’ Toronto-based insurer. There is no evidence of any juridical
advantage accruing to the shippers or their insurers from litigating the claim
in the Federal Court, rather than in the English High Court.
(h) interests of justice:
I would include here the possibility of parallel proceedings if the shippers’
action in the Federal Court continues, as well as the parties’ agreement that
English law governs any disputes and that the High Court in London is the exclusive forum.
(i) interests of the
parties: the only consideration here would seem to be one of cost. It will
presumably be more expensive for the shippers’ insurers to have to defend the
carriers’ action in London than to assert their
subrogated rights in the Federal Court. For similar reasons, it is in the
carriers’ financial interest to proceed with their action in London, rather
than to defend the action brought in the name of the shippers in Canada. Without knowing more about
the insurers or their business, it is difficult to assess the degree of
hardship to them of having to litigate in London.
(j) the need to have the
judgment recognized in another jurisdiction: if the shippers were
successful in their action in Canada, the judgment might have to
be enforced in England if the carriers have no
assets here. This would require the English courts to recognize a judgment
obtained in a proceeding pursued in breach of an anti-suit injunction. It is
very doubtful whether, in these circumstances, an English court would recognize
the Canadian judgment, especially, of course, if the carriers obtained judgment
in London on their action.
[93]
When
considering whether the forum chosen by the plaintiff is forum non
conveniens, no one factor is to be regarded as determinative: Spar
Aerospace at para. 71. All should be weighed in the context of the
particular case; their relative importance may depend on the context of the
dispute. Although there are few indications in the record about the
precise issues involved in the shippers’ claim, it would seem from the
contradictory reports as to whether the cargo was short that facts are in
dispute.
[94]
Considering,
first, the factors favouring Canada, I cannot attach much weight to the facts
that the contract was made and the ocean freight was paid in Toronto, since they appear to be
irrelevant to the issues likely to be in dispute in the cargo claim. Because
the parties specified that English law was the proper law, it cannot be
inferred from the fact that the contract was made here that they intended
Canadian law to apply to the interpretation and enforcement of the contract.
[95]
Of
potentially more importance is the fact that the cargo insurers are based in Toronto. However, there is nothing in
the record to indicate that, if forced to litigate in London, they would suffer great prejudice or be
denied an effective remedy. Without more information, I would not be prepared
to infer this from the relatively small amount of the claim.
[96]
In my
opinion, while the factors connecting the dispute to Canada are minor, those connecting it with England are cumulatively much more
significant.
[97]
First, the
English judgments implicate the principle of comity, raise the possibility of
parallel proceedings, and make the recognition in England of a judgment by the Federal Court potentially
problematic.
[98]
Second, taking
into account the parties’ choice of the High Court in London as the exclusive forum respects the principle
of freedom of contract, promotes commercial certainty, and does not frustrate
the policy objectives of section 46.
[99]
Third, it
is generally more convenient to litigate in a forum in the jurisdiction whose
law governs the dispute. Normally, counsel prefer to argue cases, and courts to
decide them, on the basis of the law with which they are most familiar. In this
case, the parties have chosen English law. However, without knowing more about
the issues in dispute respecting the alleged loss of the cargo, I cannot assess
precisely the significance of the applicable law factor, especially given the
similarities of English and Canadian law governing the carriage of goods by
sea.
[100]
Fourth, OT
Africa Line Ltd has its head office in London, where it keeps its corporate records,
books and accounts; it also may need to call one of its London-based employees to
testify about the company’s practice respecting the discharge of cargo.
D. CONCLUSION
[101]
For these
reasons, I am persuaded that the Federal Court is a less convenient forum than
the High Court in London. In these circumstances, the
interests of justice will be better served if the shippers’ action in the
Federal Court is stayed. The stay is conditional on the carriers pursuing,
without delay, their proceeding in the English High Court for a declaration
that they are not liable to the shippers for the partial loss of the cargo. The
shippers are at liberty to ask the Federal Court to consider lifting the stay
in the event that the shippers do not observe this condition.
[102]
Accordingly,
I would allow the carriers’ appeal with costs, set aside the orders of the
Federal Court, and grant a stay of the shippers’ action in the Federal Court,
conditional on the carriers pursuing, without delay, their action in the
English High Court.
“John M. Evans”
“I
agree.
Robert Décary J.A.”
“I
agree.
K. Sharlow J.A.”