Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-246-82
St. Lawrence Construction Limited (Plaintiff) v.
Federal Commerce and Navigation Company Lim ited and Tande Shipping Limited (Defendants)
and
Federal Commerce and Navigation Company Lim ited (Counter-Claimant)
v.
St. Lawrence Construction Limited (Counter- Defendant)
Court of Appeal, Urie, Mahoney and Stone JJ.— Montreal, November 5, 6, 7 and 8, 1984; Ottawa, January 4, 1985.
Maritime law — Transport of goods by water — Stranding of barge — Damages due to delay in delivery of goods — Whether due diligence exercised to make vessels seaworthy "Per package" limitation of liability under Hague Rules — Limitation of liability under Canada Shipping Act s. 647 not applicable — Whether action lay in tort as well as in contract — General average situation — Canada Shipping Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. S-9, s. 647(2) — Carriage of Goods by Water Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-15, Sch., Art. 1(b), 111 1(a), 3, 8, 1V 5 — Civil Code of Lower Canada, art. 1053.
The facts, along with certain of the issues dealt with in this judgment, are set out below in the Editor's note.
Held, the appeal should be allowed in part and the cross- appeal dismissed.
The appellant, Federal Commerce and Navigation Company Limited, failed to exercise the "due diligence" required by Article III, rule 1(a) of the Hague Rules. The peculiarities of the wind in the area were well known and an adequate survey would have found that the barge with its cargo stowed as it was could not be controlled by the tug in the wind conditions that developed.
The Trial Judge erred in denying the appellant the benefit of the "per package" limitation under Article IV, rule 5 of the Hague Rules. Even though no bill of lading was issued, the important thing is that the issuance of one was contemplated, as in the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Anticosti Shipping Co. v. St -Amand. The overriding intention was that the appellant should be able to limit its liability in terms of Article IV, rule 5 if it became necessary to do so. That intention ought not to be frustrated because of the absence of a bill of lading when all that was left to do was to ask for it. The appellant is therefore entitled to limit its liability to $500 per package or unit of cargo. And the language of Article IV, rule
5 is sufficiently broad to cover loss or damage for delay in delivering the cargo.
The Trial Judge was correct in denying the limitation of liability under subsection 647(2) of the Canada Shipping Act. The stranding and consequent loss were directly related to the decision of management to select for the survey a person without towing expertise. As a result, it decided to make use of a tug which was unfit. Therefore, the stranding and resulting loss did not occur without the "actual fault or privity" of the appellant.
The respondent, St. Lawrence Construction Limited, is en titled to recover damages for delictual fault or negligence notwithstanding the existence of the contract of carriage (see Wabasso Ltd. v. National Drying Machinery Co., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 578, at page 590). But on the other hand, the respon dent ought not to be able to sidestep contractual provisions limiting liability merely by asserting delictual fault. As was said in the Elder, Dempster case, limitation of liability must apply "whatever the form of action".
It cannot be said that, because the barge was safe, a true general average situation did not exist. While the barge was not in a position of imminent danger of destruction, neither was it in a position of mercantile safety. It was completely immobil ized. As was said in The Glaucus case, "it is no use saying that this [...] property [...] is safe, if it is safe in conditions where nobody can use it". However, the law is clear that a carrier is not entitled to recover from a shipper a contribution in general average where the general average situation was brought about by his own actionable fault.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Goodfellow (Charles) Lumber Sales Ltd. v. Verreault et al., [1971] S.C.R. 522; [1971] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 185; Anticosti Shipping Co. v. St -Amand, [1959] S.C.R. 372; The "Raphael", [1982] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 42 (C.A.); The Glaucus (1948), 81 LI. L. Rep. 262 (Adm.); Goulandris Brothers Ltd. v. B. Goldman & Sons Ltd., [1958] 1 Q.B. 74; Federal Commerce and Navigation Co. Ltd. v. Eise- nerz, [1974] S.C.R. 1225; Monarch Steamship Co. Ld. v. Karlshamns Oljefabriker (AIB), [1949] A.C. 196 (H.L.); Smith, Hogg & Co., Ltd. v. Black Sea & Baltic General Insurance Company, Ltd. (1939), 64 LI. L. Rep. 87 (C.A.).
EXAMINED:
Harland & Wolff Limited v. The Burns & Laird Lines, Limited, [1931] S.C. 722 (Scot. Sess.); Anns v. Merton London Borough Council, [1978] A.C. 728 (H.L.); Elder, Dempster & Co. v. Paterson, Zochonis & Co., [1924] A.C. 522 (H.L.); Nunes Diamonds (J.) Ltd. v. Dominion Electric Protection Co., [1972] S.C.R. 769; Wabasso Ltd. v. National Drying Machinery Co., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 578.
REFERRED TO:
Baxter's Leather Company v. Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, [1908] 2 K.B. 626 (C.A.); Gosse Millard v. Canadian Government Merchant Marine, [1927] 2 K.B. 432; Pyrene Company, Ltd. v. Scindia Steam Navigation Company, Ltd., [1954] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 321 (Q.B.D.); Renton & Co., Ltd. v. Palmyra Trading Corporation, [1956] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 379 (H.L.); Commercio Transito Internazionale vs. Lykes Bros. S.S. Co., [1957] 1 A.M.C. 1188 (2nd Cir.); Lennard's Carrying Company Limited v. Asiatic Petroleum Company Limited (1915), 13 Asp. M.L.C. 81 (H.L.); Robin Hood Mills Ltd. v. Paterson Steamships Ltd., [1937] 3 D.L.R. 1 (P.C.); Leval & Company Incorporated v. Colonial Steamship Limited, [1961] S.C.R. 221; British Columbia Telephone Com pany and Others v. Marpole Towing Ltd., [1971] S.C.R. 321; Czarnikow (C.) Ltd. v. Koufos, [1969] 1 A.C. 350 (H.L.); Dominion Chain Co. Ltd. v. Eastern Construc tion Co. Ltd. (1976), 12 O.R. (2d) 201 (C.A.); Power v. Halley (1978), 88 D.L.R. (3d) 381 (Nfld. S.C.); Surrey (District of) v. Carroll-Hatch & Associates Ltd. et al. (1979), 101 D.L.R. (3d) 218 (B.C.C.A.); Midland Bank Trust Co. Ltd. v. Hett, Stubbs & Kemp, [1979] Ch. 384; Can. Western Natural Gas Co. Ltd. v. Pathfinders Sur veys Ltd. (1980), 12 Alta. L.R. (2d) 135 (C.A.); Kienzle v. Stringer (1981), 35 O.R. (2d) 85 (C.A.); Coggs v. Bernard (1703), 2 Ld. Raym. 909 (K.B.); Nugent v. Smith (1876), 1 C.P.D. 19, reversed 423 (C.A.); Belfast Ropework Company v. Bushell, [1918] 1 K.B. 210; S.M.T. [Eastern] Ltd. v. Ruch, [1940] 1 D.L.R. 190 (N.B.S.C.); Paterson Steamships, Ld. v. Canadian Co operative Wheat Producers Ld., [1934] A.C. 538 (P.C.); Bretherton v. Wood (1821), 3 Brod. & Bing. 54 (Ex. Ch.); Liver Alkali Company v. Johnson (1874), L.R. 9 Exch. 338; Stag Line, Ld. v. Foscolo, Mango & Co., Ld., [1932] A.C. 328 (H.L.); Esso Petroleum Co. Ltd. v. Mardon, [1976] Q.B. 801 (C.A.); Batty v. Metropolitan Property Realisations Ltd., [1978] Q.B. 554 (C.A.); Maryon (John) International Ltd. et al. v. New Bruns- wick Telephone Co., Ltd. (1982), 141 D.L.R. (3d) 193 (N.B.C.A.); Donoghue v. Stevenson, [1932] A.C. 562 (H.L.); Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd., [1964] A.C. 465 (H.L.); Dorset Yacht Co. Ltd. v. Home Office, [1970] A.C. 1004 (H.L.); Junior Books Ltd. v. Veitchi Co. Ltd., [1983] 1 A.C. 520 (H.L.); Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen et al., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 2; 54 N.R. 1; Simpson v. Thomson (1877), 3 App. Cas. 279 (H.L.); Margarine Union G.m.b.H. v. Cambay Prince Steamship Co. Ltd., [1969] 1 Q.B. 219; Schiffahrt-Und Kohlen G.m.b.H. v. Chelsea Maritime Ltd. (The "Irene's Success"), [1981] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 635 (Q.B.); Union of India v. N. V. Reederij Amsterdam, [1963] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 223 (H.L.).
COUNSEL:
Blake Knox for St. Lawrence Construction Ltd.
Jean Brisset and David Colford for Federal Commerce and Navigation Co. Ltd.
SOLICITORS:
Simmard & Desjardins, Montreal, for St. Lawrence Construction Ltd.
Brisset, Bishop, Davidson & Davis, Montreal, for Federal Commerce and Navigation Co. Ltd.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
STONE J.:
EDITOR'S NOTE
This is an important judgment for its discussion of the issues of due diligence, the "per package" limitation provided for in the Hague Rules, limita tion of liability under the Canada Shipping Act and general average. Even more important is the question as to whether there can be concurrent liability in contract and tort in a case of this kind. That issue had not been dealt with in any prior Canadian case. The full text of the judgment of the Court on the above-mentioned issues is here reported.
In view of the fact that the judgment ran to some 42 pages in the English version, the Editor has decided to prepare an abridgment covering the following matters: the facts; terms of the contract; grounds of appeal and cross-appeal; the Hague Rules; the issues of unseaworthiness, fuel expenses in respect of airlifted cargo, set-off for freight charges, rate of interest and costs.
This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a judgment allowing the respondent St. Lawrence Construction Limited's claim for damages and dismissing the appellant Federal Commerce and Navigation Company Limited's counterclaims for limitation of liability and a contribution in general average. The respondent is a road construction company and the appellant an owner and opera tor of ships. The parties entered into an agree ment for the transportation, using a tug and barge, of construction equipment and supplies to a remote site near James Bay. The barge went aground on a shoal. While part of the cargo was removed by the tug and by helicopters, delivery of
some of the goods was delayed by about four months. The respondent claimed damages of $2,650,000 in respect of the delay. The appellant sought a general average contribution including the cost of building ice bridges from the barge to the construction site. The respondent relied upon the Hague Rules and the Canada Shipping Act as to limitation of liability.
The contract, in the form of a letter, contained a Paramount Clause by which the terms in the Bill of Lading were subject to the provisions of the Canadian Water Carriage of Goods Act, 1936. It further provided that the carrier would not be responsible for any loss due to delay of the goods. The agreement contained provisions as to general average and a new Jason clause.
Walsh J. found that the stranding resulted from unseaworthiness and that the appellant had not exercised due diligence to make the tug and barge seaworthy. Because the fault was that of top management, the appellant might not benefit from the "per package" limitation under the Hague Rules nor could it limit its liability under the Canada Shipping Act.
The following were among the eight grounds of appeal: (1) the stranding was caused by naviga tional errors for which the appellant was not liable; (2) due diligence to make the barge and tug seaworthy had been exercised; (3) the limita tions in the Hague .Rules and the Act did apply and (4) no action in tort lay.
In its cross-appeal, one of the respondent's arguments was that the Trial Judge erred in find ing that a true general average situation existed.
As to the issue of unseaworthiness, the Trial Judge held that errors of navigation were not the actual cause of the stranding. Rather, the tug's power was inadequate to avert the mishap when the wind freshened. This should have been fore-
seen by the appellant when it selected a tug for this job. The tug was unfit for the purpose. That finding by Walsh J. was in accordance with the evidence. Reference might be made to the opin ion of Lord Wright in Monarch Steamship Co. Ld. v. Karlshamns Oljefabriker ( A/B), [1949] A.C. 196 (H.L.) at page 226 pointing out that "the essence of unseaworthiness ... is that the unseaworthy ship is unfit to meet the peril". In the case at bar, the navigational "errors" were but by-products of unseaworthiness and not in them selves the cause of the stranding. There is au thority for the proposition that, where there would have been no loss but for the ship's unseaworthy condition, shipowners are liable even although there be negligence on the part of the master: Smith, Hogg & Co., Ltd. v. Black Sea & Baltic General Insurance Company, Ltd. (1939), 64 Ll. L. Rep. 87 (C.A.).
Due Diligence
The appellant next asserts that it exercised due diligence as it was required to do under Article III, rule 1(a) of the Hague Rules and, accordingly, that it is not liable for the loss. That is clear from Article IV, rule 1 which also places the burden of proving the exercise of "due diligence" upon the appellant. It is apparent that had the appellant conducted an adequate survey it would have found that the barge with its cargo stowed as it was could not be controlled by the Nelson River in the wind conditions that developed. The appellant appears to have paid insufficient attention to the effect of wind resistence from the fuel tanks on the ability of the tug to control the barge. Moreover, had it made an adequate investigation it would have found that the wind was susceptible of sudden change in direction and velocity. This aspect seems not to have been sufficiently probed. The informa tion was readily available as is evident from the evidence of Captain Gjerde.
The Hague Rules represent a bargain made by carrier and cargo interests. In Canada, that bar gain received legislative sanction in 1936. Prior to their adoption at a diplomatic conference in 1924, the doctrine of freedom of contract enabled a
carrier to contract out of his common law liability virtually at will. In the absence of express agree ment, liability of a common carrier for the safety of goods carried was absolute except for loss or damage caused by act of God or of the Queen's enemies or for inherent vice of the goods. (See e.g. Baxter's Leather Company v. Royal Mail Steam Packet Company, [1908] 2 K.B. 626 (C.A.); Gosse Millard v. Canadian Government Merchant Marine, [1927] 2 K.B. 432.) The situation at common law was thought to be unsatisfactory in the case of goods carried under a bill of lading constituting both a contract of carriage and a document of title. Third parties, particularly, acquiring an interest in a bill of lading had no opportunity of examining in advance its often com plex and divergent terms. There thus developed a call for standardization of terms of bills of lading, particularly as used in international trade. The Hague Rules resulted. They placed upon the ship per and the carrier certain responsibilities and liabilities and conferred certain rights and immunities. The carrier's common law obligation to make his ship seaworthy was modified by Article III, rule 1(a) requiring, instead, that he exercise "due diligence" to do so before and at the beginning of the voyage. Fulfillment of that obli gation immunizes the carrier from liability for loss or damage caused by unseaworthiness.
In my judgment, a carrier does not exercise due diligence where, as here, he plans and executes a mode of carriage by ships that he knows or should know are unfit to cope with weather conditions reasonably to be expected during the voyage. Had it exercised due diligence, the appellant would have discovered that the tug selected for the job was incapable of controlling the barge with its cargo stowed as it was. The peculiarities of the wind in the area were well known. Ignorance of them on the part of the appellant cannot be excused. It ought to have made it its business to get this information before deciding to commit the barge to the care of the Nelson River. Had the tug been fit to tow the barge with its cargo stowed as it was, the drift to port would have been controlled
and (adopting the above quoted words of Lord Wright) the tug and barge "would have passed through the peril unscathed".
The nature of the duty resting upon a carrier under Article III, rule 1(a) was discussed by the Supreme Court of Canada in Goodfellow (Charles) Lumber Sales Ltd. v. Verreault et al., [1971] S.C.R. 522; [1971] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 185 where Ritchie J. stated (at page 540 S.C.R.; page 193 Lloyd's Rep.):
When the Maxine Footwear case, supra, was heard in this Court ([1957] S.C.R. 801), a dissenting judgment was deliv ered by Mr. Justice Cartwright (as he then was). The dissent ing reasons for judgment were affirmed in the Privy Council and in the course of them Mr. Justice Cartwright adopted the following definition of the due diligence required by art. III, Rule 1:
'Due diligence' seems to be equivalent to reasonable dili gence, having regard to the circumstances known, or fairly to be expected, and to the nature of the voyage, and the cargo to be carried. It will suffice to satisfy the condition if such diligence has been exercised down to the sailing from the loading port. But the fitness of the ship at that time must be considered with reference to the cargo, and to the intended course of the voyage; and the burden is upon the shipowner to establish that there has been diligence to make her fit.
In my judgment, the appellant has not shown, as it was bound to do, that it fulfilled the duty cast upon it by Article III, rule 1(a) of the Hague Rules requiring it to exercise due diligence before and at the beginning of the voyage to make the vessels seaworthy.
"Per Package" Limitation
The appellant contends that the Trial Judge erred in denying it the benefit of "per package" limitation under Article IV, rule 5 of the Hague Rules. The respondent answers by saying that the appellant is not entitled to so limit its liability because a bill of lading was neither issued nor contemplated. The contract, it argues, was a spe cial one because the shipper and the receiver of the goods were one and the same. Article IV, rule 5, it claims, presupposes the existence of a bill of lading as well as an opportunity for a shipper to protect himself against limitation by declaring a higher value for insertion in a bill of lading covering the contract of carriage.
The appellant argues that the Trial Judge denied limitation because he was of the view that the stranding and consequent loss were caused or contributed to by the "actual fault or privity" of the appellant. That, of course, is the familiar test to be met by those seeking limitation of liability under section 647 of the Canada Shipping Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. S-9]. In introducing his consider ation of the subject the learned Judge stated [at page 73 of his reasons]:
The second legal issue raised on the question of liability is the privity of defendant company for errors which were made and its claim to exemption from liability for acts of masters of vessels or its servants in the navigation or management of the ship. This limitation is based on ... the Hague Rules adopted in Canada by The Water Carriage of Goods Act, 1936 [S.C. 1936, c. 49]....
After quoting in part the provisions of Article IV, rule 5 and discussing at some length the question whether the appellant's liability could be limited pursuant to section 647 of the Canada Shipping Act, the Trial Judge concluded that the provisions of that section could not be invoked because the stranding had not occurred "without the actual fault or privity" of the appellant. He seemed to imply, for the same reason, that the provisions of Article IV, rule 5 could not be invoked but I confess that his reason for so concluding is not entirely clear to me. Nevertheless, as he denied the claim to "per package" limitation under the Hague Rules, it becomes necessary to deal with the point on this appeal.
The right to limit liability pursuant to Article IV, rule 5 of the Hague Rules, unlike the right of limiting liability pursuant to section 647 of the Canada Shipping Act, does not depend upon the liability arising "without the actual fault or privi- ty" of the carrier. On the contrary, Article IV, rule 5 provides that neither the carrier nor the ship shall "in any event be or become liable". A carrier may limit his liability for loss or damage caused by unseaworthiness even where he has failed to exer cise due diligence as required by Article III, rule
1(a). The "actual fault or privity" of the carrier, as such, plays no part in the matter.
The respondent relies upon the decision of the Scottish Court of Session in Harland & Wolff, Limited v. The Burns & Laird Lines, Limited, [1931] S.C. 722. There, the plaintiff entered into a contract for the carriage by sea of its machinery from Glasgow to Belfast. The contract was made by correspondence and provided that the convey ance was to be "at owners' risks and subject to conditions of carriage shown in our sailing bills". The sailing bills provided that where there was no bill of lading, cargo was only received subject to certain expressed conditions including that the defendant would not be liable for "unseaworthi- ness or unfitness in ship ...". The cargo was lost overboard due to unseaworthiness and the plaintiff sued. He argued that the contract was subject to the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 1924, 14 & 15 Geo. 5., c. 22 (U.K.), that the contractual immuni ty from liability could not prevail and that the defendant had failed in its duty to exercise due diligence. These arguments were rejected, Lord President Clyde observing (at page 728):
As appears from the correspondence above referred to, the contract of affreightment in the present case was a highly special one. It was not only not actually "covered" by a bill of lading; but a bill of lading (as that document is known and used in the custom of merchants) was alien to its purpose. That purpose was not mercantile (for the goods were neither sold nor for sale) but was limited to the transport of the machinery— which the pursuers had specially made in their Glasgow shops at Finnieston for a particular ship they were building in their Belfast yard—from Finnieston to that yard. I do not see what contractual part a bill of lading capable of being used as a document of title could have played in such a contract of affreightment, or how the contract of carriage in this case could have been "covered" by a bill of lading.
The parties themselves had agreed, in effect, that no bill of lading would be issued and, accordingly, that the carriage was to be governed by the re maining provisions of the sailing bills. A bill of lading was never contemplated by the parties to the governing contract.
The appellant relies upon the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Anticosti Shipping Co. v. St -Amand, [1959] S.C.R. 372 which applied the decision of the English High Court of Justice in Pyrene Company, Ltd. v. Scindia Steam Navigation Company, Ltd., [1954] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 321 (Q.B.D.). The plaintiff, wishing to have his truck transported from the Ile d'Anticosti to Rimouski on the mainland, arranged to have it done by the defendant shipping company. A bill of lading was filled out by a clerk in the shipping company's office but it was mislaid and not issued. While conceding liability for damage done to the truck during the voyage, the defendant sought to limit its liability to $500 on the basis of Article IV, rule 5. The plaintiff contended that Article IV, rule 5 was inapplicable as a bill of lading had not been issued and, accordingly, that that "contract of carriage" as defined in Article I(b) of the Rules was not "covered" by a bill of lading. The Court rejected this argument, Rand J. stating (at page 375):
It was an ordinary transaction, and if, as the respondent's agent, he did not see fit to demand a bill of lading—as by art. III rule (3) he had the right to do—it cannot affect what on both sides was contemplated.
I am satisfied that here, too, by incorporating the Hague Rules into the contract of carriage, the parties intended to treat the transaction as an ordinary one and that the Rules would apply to it. It is true that a bill of lading was not issued but that is immaterial provided the issuance of one was contemplated by the parties. I think one was con templated. As 1 see it, the overriding intention was that the appellant should be able to limit its liabili ty in terms of Article IV, rule 5 if it became necessary to do so. A standard form bill of lading was annexed and the appellant's dock receipts incorporated "the terms, conditions, exceptions and liberties set out in the bill of lading in current use ...". That intention ought not now to be frus trated because of the absence of a bill of lading when the respondent as shipper of the cargo had it within its power to demand and secure one pursu ant to Article III, rule 3 any time after the appel lant received the goods into its charge. I therefore hold that the appellant is entitled by the contract of carriage to limit its liability for any loss or damage to or in connection with the goods in an amount not exceeding $500 per package or unit of
cargo. I am also of the view that the language of Article IV, rule 5 is sufficiently broad as to embrace loss or damage for delay in delivering the cargo (Renton & Co., Ltd. v. Palmyra Trading Corporation, [1956] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 379 (H.L.), per Lord Morton of Henryton at page 390; Com- mercio Transito Internazionale vs. Lykes Bros. S.S. Co., [1957] 1 A.M.C. 1188 (2nd Cir.)). In the course of the hearing counsel for the appellant informed the Court that he was not seeking to rely upon the provisions of clause 12 of standard form bill of lading purporting to exclude all liability for delay, but only to limit liability in accordance with Article IV, rule 5. That being so it becomes un necessary to consider whether, as claimed by the respondent, that clause was rendered null and void by virtue of Article III, rule 8 of the Hague Rules. It will be necessary to return to this subject in discussing the appellant's contention that the recoverable damages subject to limitation are for breach of the contract and not for a tort as the Trial Judge held.
Limitation of Liability—Canada Shipping Act
The appellant contends that, should it become necessary to do so, it is entitled to limit its liability in accordance with subsection 647(2) of the Canada Shipping Act. It reads in part:
647....
(2) The owner of a ship, whether registered in Canada or not, is not, where any of the following events occur without his actual fault or privity, namely,
(d) where any loss or damage is caused to any property, other than property described in paragraph (b), or any rights are infringed through
(i) the act or omission of any person, whether on board that ship or not, in the navigation or management of the ship, in the loading, carriage or discharge of its cargo or in the embarkation, carriage or disembarkation of its passen gers, or
(ii) any other act or omission of any person on board that ship;
liable for damages beyond the following amounts, namely,
In my judgment, the Trial Judge was correct in denying this limitation of liability and his conclu sion should stand. The decision to enter into the contract of carriage was made by Mr. Bell, a vice-president of the appellant, after receiving a report and recommendation from the survey team dispatched by him to James Bay. It is unnecessary to repeat what has already been said concerning the inadequacies of the survey and consequent shortcomings in the report. Mr. Bell was not a seafaring man. Yet he did not select for this important survey a person with towing expertise. Had he done so it is probable that appropriate enquiries concerning the weather reasonably to be anticipated during the towing operation would have been made and he might then have been persuaded not to use the Nelson River alone to tow the barge up-river. He occupied a high managerial position with the appellant, making his acts "the very actions of the company itself" (Lennard's Carrying Company Limited v. Asiatic Petroleum Company Limited (1915), 13 Asp. M.L.C. 81 (H.L.); Robin Hood Mills Ltd. v. Paterson Steamships Ltd., [1937] 3 D.L.R. 1 (P.C.); Leval & Company Incorporated v. Colonial Steamship Limited, [1961] S.C.R. 221; British Columbia Telephone Company and Others v. Marpole Towing Ltd., [1971] S.C.R. 321).
In my view, Mr. Bell's decision was directly related to the stranding which occurred when the barge with her cargo stowed as it was could not be controlled by the tug powered as it was in the wind conditions that were encountered. The right to limit liability in accordance with the provisions of the Canada Shipping Act is an important one which ought not to be denied except as required by the statute. In this case, the stranding and conse quent loss was caused by unsearworthiness rather than by an error committed in the navigation of the tug or the barge. It lay in management's own decision to make use of a tug which was unfit. That being so, in my judgment, the stranding and resulting loss did not occur without "the actual fault or privity" of the appellant and the Trial Judge was correct in denying limitation of liability pursuant to section 647 of the Canada Shipping Act.
Tort Damages
The appellant attacks the judgment below on a further ground, asserting that the Trial Judge erred in allowing what he referred to as "tort damages which are a direct and forseeable conse quence of the delay". The Trial Judge's conclusion in this regard was that the damages were caused by the fault of the appellant by "imprudence, neglect or want of skill" within the meaning of Article 1053 of the Quebec Civil Code. In its pleading the appellant relied upon clause 12 of the form bill of lading as excluding all liability for "delay". The respondent expressly pleaded that the stranding was "due solely to negligence and/or gross negligence and breach of contract of the Defendant". The learned Judge concluded that clause 12 could not avail the appellant because, as he put it [at page 101], "this action is not based solely on contract but is also based on tort". In his view, therefore, clause 12 was ineffectual. As the argument based upon that clause was abandoned before us, it is unnecessary to consider whether that clause constituted an attempt, contrary to Article III, rule 8 of the Hague Rules, to relieve against or lessen liability. The Trial Judge did not discuss that possibility.
The appellant contends that the respondent's damages must be for a breach of contract and only for a breach of contract because the negligence complained of occurred in the actual performance of the contract and not otherwise. The point is of some importance to parties to a contract of car riage based upon the Hague Rules made in the above circumstances as it raises the issue whether a party to such a contract may, on the basis of the same facts, sue for damages for delictual fault as well as for contractual fault. Counsel for the appellant asserts that if we were to allow the judgment below on this point to stand a shipper of goods by water would reap a virtual bonanza through the simple expedient of framing his action in tort or delict in order to sidestep contractual protections in favour of the carrier either exclud ing or limiting liability.
Traditionally, the remedy at common law of a plaintiff suffering loss due to non-performance of a contractual obligation was, with few exceptions, damages for breach of contract (see e.g. Czarni- kow (C.) Ltd. v. Koufos, [ 1969] 1 A.C. 350 (H.L.)). The exceptions are in actions for profes sional negligence (see e.g. Dominion Chain Co. Ltd. v. Eastern Construction Co. Ltd. (1976), 12 O.R. (2d) 201 (C.A.); Power v. Halley (1978), 88 D.L.R. (3d) 381 (Nfld. S.C.); Surrey (District of) v. Carroll-Hatch & Associates Ltd. et al. (1979), 101 D.L.R. (3d) 218 (B.C.C.A.); Midland Bank Trust Co. Ltd. v. Hett, Stubbs & Kemp, [ 1979] Ch. 384; Can. Western Natural Gas Co. Ltd. v. Pathfinders Surveys Ltd. (1980), 12 Alta. L.R. (2d) 135 (C.A.); Kienzle v. Stringer (1981), 35 O.R. (2d) 85 (C.A.)) and against a person exercis ing a "common calling" such as a common carrier who is duty bound to carry goods safely subject to the few exceptions already mentioned (Coggs v. Bernard (1703), 2 Ld. Raym. 909 (K.B.); Nugent v. Smith (1876), 1 C.P.D. 19, reversed 423 (C.A.); Belfast Ropework Company v. Bushell, [ 1918] 1 K.B. 210; S.M.T. [Eastern] Ltd. v. Ruch, [1940] 1 D.L.R. 190 (N.B.S.C.); and see also Paterson Steamships, Ld. v. Canadian Co-operative Wheat Producers Ld., [1934] A.C. 538 (P.C.), at page 544). The liability of a common carrier is action able on the case "which action wants not the aid of a contract to support it" (Bretherton v. Wood (1821), 3 Brod. & Bing. 54 (Ex. Ch.), page 62). Although not strictly a common carrier, a carrier of goods by sea incurs the liability of a common carrier (Liver Alkali Company v. Johnson (1874), L.R. 9 Exch. 338). The Hague Rules modified these common law principles in the case of car riage of goods by sea under a contract covered by a bill of lading (Stag Line, Ld. v. Foscolo, Mango & Co., Ld., [1932] A.C. 328 (H.L.) per Lord Atkin at page 340). Thus, for example, the carri er's obligation to make his ship seaworthy became by the Hague Rules an obligation to exercise "due diligence" to make it so. The trend in recent years toward granting relief in tort for negligent performance of a contractual obligation notwith standing the existence of a contractual relationship has not been limited to cases of professional negli gence or negligence of those exercising common
callings (Esso Petroleum Co. Ltd. v. Mardon, [1976] Q.B. 801 (C.A.); Batty v. Metropolitan Property Realisations Ltd., [1978] Q.B. 554 (C.A.)), and liability in tort for professional negli gence has been rested upon broad grounds rather than upon the mere existence of contractual rela tionship (Maryon (John) International Ltd. et al. v. New Brunswick Telephone Co., Ltd. (1982), 141 D.L.R. (3d) 193 (N.B.C.A.)).
The past few years has seen a virtual revolution in the development of the common law of negli gence, triggered by the decision of the House of Lords in the case of Donoghue v. Stevenson, [ 1932] A.C. 562 and expanded by its decisions in Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd., [ 1964] A.C. 465 and Dorset Yacht Co. Ltd. v. Home Office, [1970] A.C. 1004. More recently, in Anns v. Merton London Borough Council, [1978] A.C. 728, the House of Lords summed up the current position as to when a prima facie duty of care arises and the limitations upon its scope in these words of Lord Wilberforce (at pages 751-752):
Through the trilogy of cases in this House—Donoghue v. Stevenson [1932] A.C. 562, Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd. [1964] A.C. 465, and Dorset Yacht Co. Ltd. v. Home Office [1970] A.C. 1004, the position has now been reached that in order to establish that a duty of care arises in a particular situation, it is not necessary to bring the facts of that situation within those of previous situations in which a duty of care has been held to exist. Rather the question has to be approached in two stages. First one has to ask whether, as between the alleged wrongdoer and the person who has suffered damage there is a sufficient relationship of proximity or neigh bourhood such that, in the reasonable contemplation of the former, carelessness on his part may be likely to cause damage to the latter—in which case a prima facie duty of care arises. Secondly, if the first question is answered affirmatively, it is necessary to consider whether there are any considerations which ought to negative, or to reduce or limit the scope of the duty or the class of person to whom it is owed or the damages to which a breach of it may give rise: see Dorset Yacht case [ 1970] A.C. 1004, per Lord Reid at p. 1027.
This important decision was applied in Junior Books Ltd. v. Veitchi Co. Ltd., [1983] 1 A.C. 520 (H.L.) dealing with liability for pure economic loss and by a majority of the Supreme Court of Canada in Kamloops (City of) v. Nielsen et al., [ 1984] 2 S.C.R. 2; 54 N.R. 1.
In support of his argument that the respondent's cause of action lies in contract alone, counsel for the appellant places heavy reliance upon the deci sion of the House of Lords in Elder, Dempster & Co. v. Paterson, Zochonis & Co., [ 1924] A.C. 522. Although the contract of carriage in that case was not subject to the Hague Rules, it is the principle of that decision and its subsequent treatment in this country that is emphasized by the appellant. The case involved the carriage by sea of casks and butts of palm oil covered by a bill of lading issued by the charterer and excluding liability for dam ages arising from other goods by stowage. The barrels were overstowed with other cargo the weight of which crushed them and in consequence the palm oil was lost. The cargo owner brought an action for breach of contract or alternatively for negligence and joined both the charterer and the shipowner. It was asserted that there had been negligent stowage and that the negligence had arisen independently of the contract so as to render the bill of lading exclusion inapplicable, especially in the case of the shipowner. These arguments were rejected. It was held that the charterer and the shipowner alike were protected by the bill of lading. Viscount Finlay thought that there was liability for unseaworthiness but he, too, rejected the alternative argument based upon tort giving the following as his reasons for so doing (at page 548):
If the act complained of had been an independent tort uncon nected with the performance of the contract evidenced by the bill of lading, the case would have been different. But when the act is done in the course of rendering the very services provided for in the bill of lading, the limitation on liability therein contained must attach, whatever the form of the action and whether owner or charterer be sued. It would be absurd that the owner of the goods could get rid of the protective clauses of the bill of lading, in respect of all stowage, by suing the owner of the ship in tort.
The other Law Lords agreed but for different reasons. It seems to me that the words of Viscount
Finlay quoted above stand clearly for the proposi tion that a party to a contract of carriage will not succeed in getting rid of an expressed exclusion contained in the contract by casting his action in tort unless the tort was unconnected with the performance of the contract evidenced by a bill of lading.
In 1972 the Elder, Dempster case was applied by the Supreme Court of Canada in Nunes Dia monds (J.) Ltd. v. Dominion Electric Protection Co., [1972] S.C.R. 769. There, the respondent contracted to supply and install an alarm system in a safe belonging to the appellant, a Toronto dia mond merchant. The contract expressly excluded "conditions, warranties and representations" made by the respondent, its officers, servants or agents other than those contained in the document. It also contained a clause limiting liability to $50 for any case of failure to perform the service. Diamonds were stolen from the safe when it was broken into. The Supreme Court of Canada agreed with the courts below that there had been no breach of contract in-that the system had functioned proper ly but had been clearly by-passed by the burglars. The appellant relied as well upon certain extra- contractual statements as founding a cause of action apart from contract for negligent misstate ment on the principle of the Hedley Byrne case. The majority of the Court concluded that the statements were not actionable but in rejecting the point Pigeon J., speaking for the majority, had this to say (at pages 777-778):
Furthermore, the basis of tort liability considered in Hedley Byrne is inapplicable to any case where the relationship be tween the parties is governed by a contract, unless the negli gence relied on can properly be considered as "an independent tort" unconnected with the performance of that contract, as expressed in Elder, Dempster & Co. Ltd. v. Paterson, Zochonis & Co., Ltd. ([1924] A.C. 522), at p. 548. This is specially important in the present case on account of the provisions of the contract with respect to the nature of the obligations assumed and the practical exclusion of responsibility for failure to perform them.
That case, of course, was not concerned with a contract for the carriage of goods by water. But even so, the Supreme Court of Canada, like the House of Lords in the Elder, Dempster case, would not permit a party to a contract to escape
the effect of an express provision excluding a liability arising within the contractual relationship that existed between the parties.
As will be seen from the professional liability and other cases referred to above, even more water has passed under the keel since 1972. Moreover, in 1981 the Supreme Court of Canada discussed the co-existence of contractual and delictual fault in the case of Wabasso Ltd. v. National Drying Machinery Co., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 578. There, the appellant sought in an action instituted in the Superior Court at Trois-Rivières to fix the respondent, a United States firm, with liability based upon Article 1053 of the Quebec Civil Code. A few years after the respondent had installed certain equipment in the appellant's premises at Trois-Rivières the premises were destroyed by fire which, allegedly, was caused by the fault of the respondent. The respondent attacked the jurisdic tion of the Superior Court on the ground, inter alia, that the action was for a breach of contract made in the United States. The appellant claimed that the Superior Court had jurisdiction because "the action is based on facts and acts which occurred at Trois-Rivières, and the wrongful acts ... occurred at Trois-Rivières". It was argued that because of the existence of the contract there could be no delictual fault, but the Supreme Court of Canada disagreed. The principle of the case, it seems to me, is very broadly stated and is found in these few words of Chouinard J., speaking for the Court, (at page 590):
I conclude that the same fact can constitute both contractual fault and delictual fault, and that the existence of contractual relations between the parties does not deprive the victim of the right to base his remedy on delictual fault.
So far as I am aware, the question whether there can be concurrent liability in contract and in delict in a case of this kind has not been the subject of a prior decision of a court in this country. In my view, it needs to be answered in the light of the foregoing discussion. Before doing so, I would note in passing that a cause of action in tort against a carrier has been held to lie at common law in favour of a third party provided he owned the goods at the time of the loss (Simpson v. Thomson (1877), 3 App. Cas. 279 (H.L.), at pages 289-290; Margarine Union G.m.b.H. v. Cambay Prince
Steamship Co. Ltd., [1969] 1 Q.B. 219, at pages 236-237). Moreover, a buyer of goods has been held to have a good cause of action in tort against a carrier notwithstanding that he did not own the goods at the time of the loss (Schiffahrt-Und Kohlen G.m.b.H. v. Chelsea Maritime Ltd. (The "Irene's Success"), [1981] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 635 (Q.B.)).
I have concluded that the learned Trial Judge correctly decided that the respondent is entitled to recover damages for delictual fault or negligence notwithstanding the existence of the contract of carriage. That, it seems to me, results from the broad principle laid down in the Wabasso case. Failure to exercise due diligence constituted a contractual fault as well as a delictual fault. I would regard that failure, as Lord Devlin did in Union of India v. N. V. Reederij Amsterdam, [1963] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 223 (H.L.), at page 235, as "negligence". I do not see how its character as such is altered merely by the existence of a con tractual relationship creating a corresponding con tractual duty. As I see it, it was this negligence that caused the stranding and for it the appellant is answerable in delict as well as in contract.
On the other hand, I fully agree with the appel lant's contention that the respondent ought not to be able to sidestep contractual provisions limiting its liability merely by asserting delictual fault. To borrow Viscount Finlay's phrase in the Elder, Dempster case (at page 548) limitation of liability must apply "whatever the form of the action". Clearly, the respondent cannot recover its damages twice over and those damages, when ascertained, are to be limited "per package or unit" as I have already decided. In this regard the following words of Sir John Donaldson M.R. in The "Raphael", [1982] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 42 (C.A.) commend them selves to me as expressing the principle which I think should be applied here. He said (at page 46):
But I know of no case in which words of exclusion have been held to operate in relation to a liability for breach of an
obligation in contract, but not to affect liability for breach of the self-same obligation in tort. Indeed, the whole concept of a hypothetical discussion between two parties, other than law students, which led to such an agreement is patently absurd.
The parties did not lay down at trial a sufficient evidentiary basis upon which we can determine the measure of the respondent's damages. They were content, it appears, to have the Trial Judge decide the case on its merits and to have the damages referred. In my view, which heads of damages claimed are recoverable must be determined in the Trial Division. That cannot be done by the referee whose function it is to calculate the amount of damages following that determination. The matter ought therefore to be remitted to the Trial Division to make its determination upon evidence adduced by both sides. After that, the reference may pro ceed for a calculation by the referee of recoverable damages.
General Average
The appellant asserts that the Trial Judge erred in concluding that the proportionate share of gen eral average attributable to the respondent's inter est in the adventure and totalling $604,763.64, is not recoverable. The respondent supports that con clusion but adds a further argument against recov ery. It says that general average ought not to have been declared in the first place because a true general average situation did not exist. The barge remained firmly stranded on the shoal without prospect of being refloated until after break-up of the ice in the summer of 1973. Refloating of the barge in the summer of 1973 became possible only after the removal of certain items of cargo.
I have some difficulty in acceding to the respondent's argument. The barge was virtually high and dry at low tide. The general average surveyor who was present at the refloating opera tion reported that "it was touch and go" whether the operation would succeed. It was done with an anchor and tackle. A tug was present but, for lack of water, it had to stand off. The barge had to be moved from the shoal over a sandy bottom and across two other sand banks which she touched
during the operation. In the words of the surveyor: "The barge slowly came off the bank, stopped, started, grounded, but eventually it was afloat." The barge appeared not to have been in a position of imminent danger of destruction; nor, while it remained on the shoal, was it in a position of mercantile safety. It was completely immobilized. I think the following words of Willmer J. in The Glaucus (1948), 81 Ll. L. Rep. 262 (Adm.) (at page 266) cover the situation here:
It is no use saying that this valuable property, worth something approaching a million pounds, is safe, if it is safe in circum stances where nobody can use it. For practical purposes, it might just as well be at the bottom of the sea.
I therefore agree that a true general average situa tion did exist in this case.
On the other hand, the law is also clear that a carrier is not entitled to recover from a shipper a contribution in general average where the general average situation was brought about by his own actionable fault. The position is made clear in Goulandris Brothers Ltd. v. B. Goldman & Sons Ltd., [1958] 1 Q.B. 74. In that case the Court was called upon to interpret Rule D of the York- Antwerp Rules, 1950:
Rights to contribution in general average shall not be affect ed, though the event which gave rise to the sacrifice or expendi ture may have been due to the fault of one of the parties to the adventure; but this shall not prejudice any remedies which may be open against that party for such fault.
Pearson J. concluded that "rights" to a general average contribution could be overriden by "reme- dies" for faults. He said (at pages 92-93):
In my view that is clearly the intended mode of operation of the two parts of rule D, and it affords the clue to the interpretation of the rule. The first part refers to the rights to contribution in general average as they will be set out in the average adjust ment, and these are properly and naturally called "rights," because normally the holder of such rights is entitled to receive payment. But the second part of the rule provides that the first part is not to prejudice remedies for faults. That implies that in some cases the remedies referred to in the second part of the rule will override the rights referred to in the first part; in other words, the second part operates as a proviso, qualifying, over riding, cutting down or derogating from the first part. The rights may be nullified or defeated or diminished or otherwise affected by the remedies. In that sense the rights referred to in
the first part of the rule are prima facie rights because they are subject to the remedies.
The position, therefore, is that the claimants have their prima facie right to recover from the respondents contribution in general average, but the respondents may be able to defeat that right by using their "remedies" for the claimants' "fault."
The Supreme Court of Canada gave Rule D a similar interpretation in Federal Commerce and Navigation Co. Ltd. v. Eisenerz, [ 1974] S.C.R. 1225. See also "Lowndes & Rudolph, General Average and the York Antwerp Rules", 10th ed., British Shipping Laws, Vol. 7, para. 67 at pages 36-37.
Moreover, the contract of carriage incorporated the "New Jason Clause" which, on a fair interpre tation does not entitle the appellant to recover a contribution in general average from cargo if it was responsible for the situation "by statute, con tract; or otherwise". In my judgment, the Trial Judge correctly concluded that the appellant cannot recover a general average contribution. The appellant was obliged to exercise due diligence to make the tug and barge seaworthy. Its failure to do so was due entirely to its own negligence and it was that negligence that caused the stranding and the resulting loss. Had due diligence been exer cised, as it ought to have been, the stranding would not have occurred and declaration of general aver age would have been unnecessary. As the appellant was itself at fault it cannot expect the respondent to contribute anything in general average.
The Trial Judge deferred a decision on the appellant's counterclaim for 50% of the cost of helicopter fuel until after a reference. That was unnecessary since the amount was liquidated and no further proof was required. It was unfair that the appellant should continue out-of-pocket for the cost of this fuel.
The cross-appeal against the refusal to allow the respondent to set-off its damages against the
balance of freight charges had become academ ic, the freight having been paid pursuant to a judgment. There was much authority supporting the Trial Judge in holding that there could not be a set-off in a case of this kind.
In its amended statement of claim, the respond ent had claimed "interest at the legal rate" on its damages. The Trial Judge allowed interest at 5%. Although this Court had dismissed an application to amend the amended statement of claim to claim interest in excess of the "legal rate", that was not a bar to raising the interest rate issue on this cross-appeal. Since the application was con cerned only with the propriety of allowing an amendment to the pleading subsequent to trial, the principle of res judicata did not apply. But no attempt to claim an increased interest rate was made prior to judgment and no evidence support ing a higher rate was led at trial. This aspect of the cross-appeal should accordingly be rejected.
The appellant's argument, that a decision as to costs should have awaited completion of the ref erence, could not be accepted. The Trial Judge correctly decided that the respondent should have judgment. Variation of that judgment upon appeal did not justify interference with that exer cise of discretion.
The appeal should succeed in part and the cross-appeal fail. The defendant may limit its liability pursuant to the Carriage of Goods by Water Act but not under the Canada Shipping Act.
URIE J.: I agree.
MAHONEY J.: I agree.
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