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A-152-76
May & Baker (Canada) Ltd. (Plaintiff) v.
The Motor Tanker Oak and her Owners, Skibs A/S Hassel & A/S Spesialtank, (A/S Rederiet Odfjell, Managers) (Defendants)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Pratte and Heald JJ.—Ottawa, June 23, 1978.
Practice — Service — Orders made on ex parte application to extend time for service of declaration Defendants without opportunity to be heard until motion to set aside on grounds that extensions granted without sufficient reason — Appeal from judgment of Trial Division dismissing motion — Federal Court Rule 306.
This appeal is by the corporate defendants from the judg ment of the Trial Division dismissing the motion to set aside service of the declaration "on the grounds that the extensions of time for service ... were granted without sufficient reason". The orders were made on ex parte application and the corpo rate defendants were given no opportunity to be heard until the motion to set aside the service—in essence a motion for an order to set aside such orders in so far as necessary to make a consequential order to set aside the service. No appeal from the orders had been launched, thereby preventing the Court's granting relief on that basis.
Held, the appeal is allowed. The material submitted in support of the ex parte orders extending the time disclosed no "sufficient" reason for extending the time of service. When an order is made ex parte, in the absence of something to the contrary, there is an inherent jurisdiction in the Court, after the party adversely affected has been heard, if it then appears that the ex parte order or judgment should not have been made, to set aside the ex parte order and to make such ancillary order as may be necessary to restore the party adversely affected to the position he would have been in if the ex parte order or judgment had not been made. The party aggrieved is entitled, upon an application to set aside an ex parte order, to obtain such relief. Appellant (the corporate defendants) should have been granted such relief by the judgment that is the subject of this appeal.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
Gerald P. Barry for plaintiff. Victor DeMarco for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
McMaster, Meighen, Montreal, for plaintiff.
Brisset, Bishop, Davidson & Davis, Montreal, for defendants.
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
JACKETT C.J.: This is an appeal from a judg ment of the Trial Division dismissing an applica tion of the appellants (the corporate defendants) to set aside service of the statement of claim.
The relevant facts may be summarized chrono logically as follows:
October 27, 1971: A cargo consigned to the respondent was, allegedly, delivered in bad order in the Province of Quebec by the ship named in the declaration.
October 24, 1972: A statement of claim was issued out of the Trial Division for the respond ent's claim.
October 22, 1973: An order of the Trial Divi sion extended the time for service of the declara tion until October 22, 1974.
February 1, 1974: The ship Oak was sold by the corporate defendants named as owner.
September 30, 1974: An order of the Trial Divi sion extended the time for service of the declara tion until September 30, 1975, and ordered that "service be made in accordance with the law of Norway".
September 9, 1975: Service of the declaration was made on the ship and corporate respondents named in the style of cause in Norway.
October 6, 1975: On an application for leave to file a conditional appearance, the Trial Division granted the appellant a 30 day stay.
October 29, 1975: A conditional appearance was entered by the appellant.
November 3, 1975: A motion to set aside the service of the declaration "on the grounds that the extensions of time for service ... were grant ed without sufficient reason" was referred to the judge of the Trial Division who granted the second extension.
February 24, 1976: The aforesaid application was dismissed.
This appeal is by the corporate defendants from the judgment of the Trial Division of February 24, 1976, dismissing the motion to set aside service of the declaration "on the grounds that the extensions of time for service ... were granted without suffi cient reason".
Two aspects of the matter may be mentioned to put them aside, viz:
(a) the declaration was used to launch an action in rem against the ship and an action in perso- nam against the owners and manager but this appeal relates only to the service of the declara tion on the corporate defendants,' and
(b) I do not have to consider certain objections of a more or less technical nature (the form of the document served and the form of the order for service ex iuris) relied on by the appellant having regard to my conclusion on the point of substance raised in the motion in the Trial Division to set the service aside.
It is not irrelevant to note that, notwithstanding a statutory requirement that an action of the kind here involved be launched within 12 months of the cause of action arising, if the judgment a quo is correct, the defendant is faced with an action in which the originating document was served almost four years after the alleged cause of action arose.
Leaving aside the technical objections to which I have referred, the service in question was duly made as contemplated by Rule 306, which reads: Rule 306. A statement of claim or declaration may be served
under Rule 304 within 12 months from the day when the statement of claim or declaration was filed; but where, for any sufficient reason, a statement of claim or declaration has not been served within that time, the Court may, by order, made either before or after the expiration of such time, extend the time for service for a period not exceeding 12 months at any one time, each of such extensions to be calculated from the date of the order.
unless the orders extending time are subject to attack and have been properly attacked.
I In my view, a declaration in an action in rem cannot be served ex iuris. See The "Mesis" v. Louis Wolfe & Sons (Vancouver) Limited [1977] 1 F.C. 429.
In my view, the material submitted in support of the ex parte orders extending time disclosed no "sufficient" reason for extending the time for service. 2 An obvious "sufficient reason" would be that the defendant was avoiding service. There are, of course, other sufficient reasons. In my view, however, when the defendant was available for service and the plaintiff was not inhibited from serving or induced by the defendant not to serve, it is almost impossible to think of a "sufficient rea son" for not serving within the time fixed for serving. The material filed in support of the two orders extending time does not reveal any facts that, in my view, disclose "sufficient reason".
If, therefore, the appellant had chosen to appeal (after obtaining appropriate extensions of time, which, I should have thought, would have been granted almost of course if sought in a timely way), I should have been of the view that the orders extending time should be set aside and that a consequential order should be made setting aside the service made pursuant thereto.' As, however, there was no such appeal, on the proceedings as they exist, this Court cannot grant relief on that basis.
However, here the orders were made on ex parte applications and the appellant was given no oppor tunity to be heard with regard thereto until the motion to set aside the service, which motion, in my view, should be treated as a motion for an order to set aside such orders in so far as necessary to make a consequential order to set aside the service. This appeal is from the dismissal of that motion.
Generally speaking, when a court makes an order or delivers a judgment, in the absence of special provision, it is without authority to review
2 Compare Sumitomo Shoji Kaisha Ltd. v. First Steamship Co. [1970] Ex.C.R. 754, and Grace Kennedy & Company Limited v. Canada Jamaica Line (1968) (unreported), a copy of which is set out in an ANNEX hereto.
3 Such a consequential order would follow just as an order to repay would be granted to repay money collected under a judgment if the judgment were set aside on appeal. See Wilby v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration [1975] F.C. 636, footnote 8 at page 642.
such order or judgment. Its correctness can only be dealt with on appeal. When, however, an order is made ex parte, in my view, in the absence of something to the contrary, there is an inherent jurisdiction in the Court, after the party adversely affected has been given an opportunity to be heard, if it then appears that the ex parte order or judgment should not have been made,
(a) to set aside the ex parte order or judgment as of the time when the order setting aside is made, and
(b) to make such ancillary order as may be necessary to restore the party adversely affected to the position he would have been in if the ex parte order or judgment had not been made. 4
It follows, in my view, that, in such a case, the party aggrieved is entitled, upon an application to set aside an ex parte order, to obtain such relief, and that the appellant, as such an aggrieved party, should have been granted such relief by the judg ment that is the subject matter of this appeal.
I am, therefore, of opinion that the appeal should be allowed with costs, that the judgment of the Trial Division of February 24, 1976, should be set aside, that the orders of the Trial Division extending time, of October 22, 1973 and Septem- ber 30, 1974, respectively, should be set aside and that the service of the declaration on the appel lants should be set aside.
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PRATTE J. concurred.
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HEALD J. concurred.
ANNEX
to the Reasons in
May & Baker (Canada) Ltd. v. The Motor Tanker
"OAK"
" By ex parte order or judgment I refer to one where the party adversely affected was not given an opportunity to respond. When the Court reviews the matter it will do so after considering either
(a) further evidence offered by such party, or
(b) representations made by him, or both.
IN THE EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA —IN ADMIRALTY—
No. 410
Messrs. Grace Kennedy & Company Limited (Plaintiff)
v.
Canada Jamaica Line, Canada West Indies Ship ping Company Limited A/S Dovrefjell and A/S Rudolf (Defendants)
and
No. 422
Philipp Brothers (Canada) Limited and Eduardo K. L. Earle S.A. (Plaintiffs)
v.
Hamburg-Amerika Linie and Balfour Guthrie (Canada) Limited (Defendants)
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
JACKETT P.: Applications have been made by mail in both these cases for extension of the time for service of the writ of summons for a period of one year.
In Grace Kennedy & Company Limited v. Canada Jamaica Line the writ was issued on December 30, 1966, and the endorsement shows that the subject matter of the action is shortage and damage in respect of a cargo on a vessel that arrived at Kingston, Jamaica on December 30, 1965.
In Philipp Brothers (Canada) Limited the writ was issued on January 23, 1967, and the endorse ment shows that the action relates to loss and damage in respect of a cargo on a vessel that arrived at Bilbao, Spain on December 7, 1965.
In each case the writ carries a notation reading in part, "This Writ may be served within twelve months from the date thereof exclusive of the day of such date, but not afterwards".
The motion in each case indicates that the application is made under Rule 17 of the Admiral ty Rules, which reads in part as follows:
17. (1) A writ of summons, whether in rem or in personam may be served within 12 months from the date thereof.
(2) Where for any sufficient reason a writ has not been served on a defendant within the time limited for service, the Court may by order, made either before or after the expiration of such time, extend the time for service for a period not exceeding 12 months at any one time, each of such extensions to be calculated from the date of the order.
In the Grace Kennedy & Company Limited action, the motion reads as follows:
WHEREAS suit has been instituted by Plaintiff against Defendants in this Honourable Court under number 410 by a Writ of Summons in personam issued on the 30th day of December 1966.
WHEREAS Plaintiff's claim is presently under negotiation with Defendants Canada Jamaica Line and Canada West Indies Shipping Company Limited with a prospect of settle ment of the claim being concluded.
WHEREAS in view of the negotiations presently being carried on as aforesaid, the service of the Writ of Summons upon Defendants A/S DOVREFJELL and A/S RUDOLF has been withheld.
WHÉREAS it is justified and in the interest of all parties that the date for service of the Writ of Summons herein be extended for an additional period of one year up to and including the 30th day of December 1968, in order that the parties may arrive at a settlement without the necessity of entering into litigation.
WHEREAS Plaintiff will suffer a prejudice if this motion is not granted.
THAT Plaintiff prays for judgment herein extending the validity and the date for service of the Writ of Summons herein up to and including the 30th day of January 1968, or any other date that this Honourable Court see fit to fix, the whole with costs to follow suit.
It is supported by the affidavit sworn by Bruce Cleven, reading as follows:
I, Bruce Cleven, Advocate of the City of Town of Mount Royal, District of Montreal and therein residing and domiciled at 223 Lazard Avenue, being duly sworn do depose and say:-
1. THAT I am one of the attorneys for the Plaintiffs herein.
2. THAT the facts contained in the foregoing Motion are true.
In the Philipp Brothers (Canada) Limited action the motion is worded exactly the same as in the Grace Kennedy & Company Limited motion except for differences in detail, and is supported by an affidavit also taken by Bruce Cleven sworn on the same date and in precisely the same words as in the Grace Kennedy & Company Limited case.
In effect, what the motion says, in each case, is that, because negotiations are being carried on with one or some of the defendants, service of the writ on the other defendant or defendants has been
withheld and that the plaintiffs will suffer a preju dice if an extension of the period of time for service is not granted.
The submission set out in the motion is that it is "justified" and "in the interest of all the parties" that the date for service of the writ of summons be extended for an additional year "in order that the parties may arrive at a settlement without the necessity of entering into litigation".
The question that I have to decide is whether these motions reveal "any sufficient reason" for the writs not having been served on the defendants on whom they have not been served within the time limited for service within the meaning of those words in Rule 17(2) of the Admiralty Rules of this Court.
I have had occasion previously to refuse to grant a motion made on substantially the same grounds. Where the policy reflected by the law is that a lawsuit in respect of a cause of action be launched within a limited period from the time the cause of action arises and that the defendant or defendants in such a lawsuit be served with the initiating document within a limited period from the launch ing of the proceedings, it does not appear to me to be a "sufficient reason" for not serving a particu lar defendant within the specified period to show that the plaintiff is carrying on settlement discus sions with some other defendant. Each defendant, as it seems to me, is entitled to the benefit of the law. If such a reason were accepted as a "sufficient reason", it would operate to frustrate the obvious purpose of statutes limiting the periods for com mencing actions.
In these cases, it is noted that the applications for extension of the periods for service are being made after the periods for service have expired.
Since the time when I had occasion to deal with this matter on the occasion to which I have referred, the same question has arisen in the Court of Appeal in England in Osborne v. Distillers Company Ltd., and has been dealt with by the Court of Appeal in a judgment that is reported in the London Times newspaper law reports of November 18, 1967. The report of that case reads in part as follows:
That made it plain that an action about thalidomide had been started by someone else in 1962; so the writ should have been issued, served, and then negotiated to stand over pending the outcome of the earlier action.
The solicitor did issue the writ on May 28, 1965, within the three years against the three defendants. From what the Court had heard the effective defendant was Distillers Co. (Biochemi- cals) Ltd. It was hardly suggested that the doctor was to blame.
It claimed damages for negligence, breach of duty and the like, but gave no date when the wrong was done. And it was not served.
The rules allowed 12 months in which to serve a writ on defendants. But when the Statute of Limitations had run or was running, the practice was not to extend it beyond the 12 months unless there was good reason, as, for example, if the defendant was avoiding service.
In the present case the solicitor did not serve the writ within 12 months. Instead, he applied ex parte to the District Regis trar for it to be renewed, making an affidavit in which he said: "There is a test action pending ... in connexion with a similar claim, and in order to obviate unnecessary costs, the plaintiffs have instructed me to take no further steps until the court has ... decided the test action."
He could not have read Battersby v. Anglo-American Oil Co. Ltd. ([1945] 1 K.B. 23, at p. 32) which said that "ordinarily it is not a good reason (for renewing a writ) that the plaintiff desires to hold up the proceedings while some other case is tried or to await some future development".
Judge right
Nor in the affidavit did the solicitor say anything about the time when the cause of action arose or about the limitation period having expired. The Registrar renewed it for 12 months and it was served on May 2, 1967.
That was the first that the Distillers Company heard of the claim. They entered a conditional appearance and applied to have the renewal set aside because no good reason had been shown. Master Jacob did not set it aside, but Mr. Justice Chapman did on appeal.
That meant that the action failed. His Lordship was satisfied that the judge was right. The company should have had notice of the claim from the beginning; and when the solicitor got the legal aid certificate, he should not only have issued but served the writ, stated the time when the baby was born, and in applying for renewal should have drawn attention to the dates and how the Act would run.
If the Registrar had been put on notice he would probably have refused the extension. When a plaintiff let time run it was prejudicial to defendants to have the writ renewed so that an action could be brought against them when they had, so to speak, closed their books. The Court had been told that some 70 writs had been issued against the companies and negotia tions were on foot for their settlement and that the defendants or their insurers wanted to know the extent of the claims
because that might be an important element in negotiations for a settlement. They were entitled to know where they stood. It would be prejudicial to them to let the writ be renewed unless good reason was shown; and no good reason was shown here.
The case came within the general principle that a writ was not to be renewed so as to deprive the defendant of the benefit of the statute save for good reason.
I have no information before me as to whether there is a statute of limitations that has any application in this case.
The decision of the Court of Appeal in Osborne v. Distillers Company Limited confirms the view that I had already formed, that it is not ordinarily a good reason to extend the time of service of a writ when the "plaintiff desires to hold up the proceedings while some other case is tried or to await some future development".
Unless, within ten days from the date of these reasons, an application is made by the plaintiffs for an opportunity to make submissions to the contrary, the application will be dismissed with costs.
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