Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-1107-73
Irish Shipping Ltd. (Plaintiff) v.
The Queen, Leslie Arthur Davis Jones, Arthur Joseph Warren and Pacific Pilotage Authority (Defendants)
Trial Division, Collier J.—Vancouver, February 21; Ottawa, March 1, 1974.
Practice—Discovery—Officer of defendant Crown to be examined—Disagreement as to person designated by plain- tiff—Crown nominating another—Officer requested by plain tiff chosen by Court Rule 465(1Xc).
In an action for damages arising out of the grounding of its vessel, the plaintiff wished to examine "a departmental or other officer" of the defendant Crown. The latter reject ed the officer requested by the plaintiff and nominated a different officer.
Held, there is no presumption that the person nominated by the Deputy Attorney General is necessarily the depart mental or other officer who ought to answer on behalf of the Crown. The question is primarily one of fact. If the opposite party can satisfy the Court that it is in the interest of justice that another departmental or other officer, within the mean ing of the Rule, is more suitable than the person nominated on behalf of the Crown, and is in a position of sufficient responsibility to provide answers binding on the Crown, the Court should nominate the more suitable person. Here the Court nominated the person requested by the plaintiff. The nominee, although junior in rank to the person designated by the Crown, was a senior officer, with more personal knowl edge, than the Crown nominee, of many of the practical matters in issue.
Yarmolinsky v. The King [1944] Ex.C.R. 85; Central Canada Potash Co. Ltd. v. Attorney-General for Sas- katchewan (1974) 39 D.L.R. (3d) 88; Canadian Dough nut Co. Ltd. of Toronto v. Canada Egg Products Ltd. of Saskatoon (1952) 5 W.W.R. (N.S) 428; Morrison v. G. T. Ry. Co. [1940] S.C.R. 325; Nichols & Shephard Co. v. Skedanuk (1912) 2 W.W.R. 1002, 5 Alta L.R. 110; Leitch v. G.T. Ry. Co. (1888) 12 P.R. 671; City of Regina v. Robinson's Clothes Ltd. (1922) 66 D.L.R. 820, [1922] 2 W.W.R. 807, applied.
MOTION. COUNSEL:
J. Jessiman for plaintiff.
G. Eggertson for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Macrae, Montgomery, Spring & Cunning- ham, Vancouver, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendants.
COLLIER J.—The plaintiff wishes to examine for discovery a departmental or other officer of the defendant Crown. It asked that one Captain C. E. Burrill be produced. The Crown did not agree, and pursuant to Rule 465(1)(c) one Her- bert Ogg Buchanan was nominated by the Deputy Attorney General of Canada.
The plaintiff then applied to the Court for an order nominating Captain Burrill. Two affidavits (by the same deponent) were filed in support of the plaintiff's motion. An affidavit by Mr. Buchanan was filed in opposition. Cross-exami nation on these affidavits was carried out.
The action as against all defendants is for damages arising out of the grounding of the vessel Irish Stardust on Haddington Island, British Columbia, on January 24, 1973. As a result of the grounding, the vessel was damaged and there was a fuel oil spill. Among other things, prosecutions were launched and I under stand there is another action in this Court in which a claim is made on behalf of the Crown against the vessel and her owners in respect of the damages and expenses caused by the fuel oil spill.
I am told there is a considerable sum of money involved in all this litigation.
The allegation against the Crown is set out in paragraph 10 of the statement of claim as follows:
The said grounding and damages suffered by the Plaintiff were caused by the negligence of the servants of Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada (hereinafter called "the Crown") in the improper design and marking of the traffic separation scheme with respect to the passing of Haddington Island from the West, in the inadequate and improper installation of such lights, beacons and buoys and other aids to navigation which were provided with respect to
the said scheme, and in the failure to install proper aids to navigation with respect to the said scheme.
I do not think it necessary for the purposes of this judgment to refer to the defence filed on behalf of Her Majesty the Queen.
The relevant portions of the Rule in question are as follows:
Rule 465. (1) For the purposes of this Rule, a party may be examined for discovery, as hereinafter in this Rule provided,
(a) if the party is an individual, by questioning the party himself,
(b) if the party is a corporation or any body or group of persons empowered by law to sue or to be sued, either in its own name or in the name of any officer or other person, by questioning any member or officer of such corporation, body or group,
(c) if the party is the Crown, by questioning any depart mental or other officer of the Crown nominated by the Attorney General of Canada or Deputy Attorney General of Canada or by order of the Court, and
(d) in any case, by questioning a person who has been agreed upon by the examining party and the party to be
examined with the consent of such person,
Counsel for Her Majesty contends that once a person has been nominated (pursuant to the Rule) by the Attorney General or his Deputy, then the Court should not lightly interfere with that nomination. I do not think that is the cor rect manner in which to approach the Rule in question. It seems to me that in the case of examination for discovery of a departmental or other officer of the Crown there are three possibilities:
(a) the opposite party may request a certain person to be produced and the Crown may consent to that request and produce him as the departmental or other officer for discov ery purposes;
(b) the opposite party may have no knowledge as to the identity of the most desirable or proper person to be examined in a particular case and may ask the Crown to name someone;
(c) in the case of a dispute between the par ties as to the departmental or other officer to be produced for discovery (as arose here) the
Attorney General may exercise whatever rights he has under the Rule and nominate a person on behalf of the Crown.
In my view there is no presumption that the person nominated in the latter situation is neces sarily the departmental or other officer who ought to answer on behalf of the Crown. As I see it, the question is primarily one of fact and if the opposite party can satisfy the Court that it is in the interests of justice that some other person, who is a "departmental or other officer" within the meaning of the Rule, is more suitable than the person nominated, and is at the same time in a position of sufficient responsibility to provide answers binding on the Crown, then the Court ought to nominate the more suitable person.
That approach seems to me to be in accord ance with the general views expressed by Thor- son P. in Yarmolinsky v. The King [1944] Ex.C.R. 85. The Rule of Court at that time was somewhat different. The Crown did not nomi nate an officer. If a person was not produced by consent then a motion could be made for an order that "a departmental or other officer of the Crown" could be examined for discovery. There was a further Rule (Rule 138) which provided that the whole or any part of this discovery might be used in evidence. Thorson P. expressed the view it was desirable the opposite party should have full discovery of facts from the Crown and that party should be in no differ ent position than if he were a litigant in a suit against a private person (be it a person or a corporation).
The only qualification the president asserted was that the departmental or other officer of the Crown should be a responsible person in the sense that he could bind the Crown by any admissions made. The essence of the general observations made by Thorson P. in the Yar- molinsky case is found at page 95:
In my view, similar principles should be adopted in this Court as long as Rules 130 and 138 remain in their present form. Rule 130 providing for the examination for discovery
of a departmental or other officer of the Crown contem plates that the person ordered to be examined shall be a person in a position of responsibility and authority who is qualified to represent the Crown on the examination, make discovery of the relevant facts with the knowledge of the Crown and make such admissions on its behalf as may properly be made. Beyond this general statement I do not think it possible to go. I agree with the remarks made by Moss J.A. in the Morrison Case (supra), at page 43:
The question of what persons are examined under the Rule as officers of a corporation must always become more or less a question of fact, and it may generally be found more easy to say who is not an officer within the Rule than to lay down any rule for general guidance.
On the particular facts of that case it was held a Lance Corporal driving a Crown vehicle involved in a motor accident was not a "depart- mental or other officer".
The tendency in the Courts of this country in recent years has been to provide all litigants with full and complete discovery prior to trial and to remove as much as possible what used to be known as the "ambush" tactics of the adver sary system. In my view that is the general intention of the Federal Court Rules. Purely as an illustration, I refer to Rule 482 dealing with evidence to be given by expert witnesses. This is a form of pre-trial discovery still not found in the Rules of many of the provinces.
To my mind the general approach in an application of this kind under Rule 465(1)(c) ought to be that set out in Central Canada Potash Co. Ltd. v. Attorney-General for Sas- katchewan (1974) 39 D.L.R. (3d) 88. There, the plaintiff sought to examine for discovery the Minister of Mineral Resources of Saskatche- wan. The defendant, the Government of Sas- katchewan, sought to put forward the Deputy Minister. It is true the Saskatchewan statute and Rules are not identical to the Rule in question here, but in my opinion the principles stated in the Potash case are applicable. I quote Disbery J. at pages 90-91:
The correct approach of the Court when designating the proper officer of a corporation to be examined for discovery was aptly stated by Thorson, J., in Canadian Doughnut Co. Ltd. of Toronto v. Canada Egg Products Ltd. of Saskatoon (1952), 5 W.W.R. (N.S.) 428 at p. 430, as follows:
The purpose of an examination of an officer of a corporation under our R. 233(3) is two-fold: Firstly, to obtain a full discovery of the facts and, secondly, to obtain admissions which may be used against the com pany whose officer is being examined. Ordinarily the proper person to be examined is the officer who is best able to give information respecting the matters at issue in the action and who, at the same time, occupies a position of such responsibility and importance as would, under the circumstances of the case, qualify him to speak on behalf of the corporation he represents. Whether essential or not, it is, at least, desirable that the officer to be examined should be one who has some connection with the transac tion or occurrence out of which the action arose or has some knowledge of the facts or matters at issue in the action. Generally speaking, as pointed out by Moss, J.A. (later C.J.O.) in Morrison v. G. T. Ry. Co., supra, at p.43, a proper officer to be examined in the first instance is the one who, if there was no action, would be looked upon as the proper officer to act and speak on behalf of and bind the corporation in the kind of transaction or occurrence out of which the action arose. See also Nichols & Shep- hard Co. v. Skedanuk (1912) 2 W.W.R. 1002, 5 Alta LR 110, Harvey, C.J.A. at 1004, and Leitch v. G.T. Ry. Co. (1888) 12 PR 671, Armour C.J. at 672.
These reasons, in my opinion, are equally applicable to the designation of an officer of the Crown for the purpose of an examination for discovery as authorized by s. 13 of the Proceedings against the Crown Act: see also City of Regina v. Robinson's Clothes Ltd. (1922), 66 D.L.R. 820 [1922] 2 W.W.R. 807, and Yarmolinsky v. The King [1944] 4 D.L.R. 217, [1944] Ex.C.R. 85.
On the facts here there is no doubt Captain Burrill had an active, though not the sole part, in the work and planning culminating in the recom mendations made to higher officials in Ottawa in regard to the traffic separation scheme for the passing of Haddington Island from the West. I need not detail the evidence supporting that statement. Captain Burrill was in the words of Mr. Buchanan, a "senior officer" reporting to Buchanan as his immediate superior. Buchanan in turn reported to other officers in Ottawa. Buchanan was at the material times the Region al Director of Marine Services for Western Canada. Burrill was the Regional Superintend-
ent of Nautical Services. (His title has since changed, but his responsibilities have increased.)
Buchanan was the senior man in Western Canada, but on his own admission, was primari ly concerned with "administration and control". Reports came across his desk and recommenda tions were forwarded to Ottawa. Neither Burrill nor Buchanan had any authority to make any final decision as to whether or not any traffic separation scheme would be put into service at Haddington Island, nor could they make any decision as to the kind of scheme that might be adopted. It was conceded by counsel for the Crown that the ultimate decisions were in the office of the appropriate Minister or perhaps his Deputy.
Some concern was expressed by counsel for the Crown that the proper officer in this case should be someone senior to Captain Burrill. Buchanan was said to meet this requirement. I am satisfied on the facts here that Burrill quali fies as a "departmental or other officer" as does Buchanan'. As I have indicated, I have no doubt Burrill has more personal knowledge than Buchanan of many of the factual matters in issue in this action. Personal knowledge is not the ultimate test as to what officer should be nominated, but is a factor to be considered. I am further satisfied both Buchanan and Burrill are persons "... in a position of responsibility and authority" to properly make admissions on behalf of the Crown 2 .
The weight of the circumstances here is there fore in favour of nominating Burrill, and I there fore so order. If Mr. Buchanan had been clothed with decision-making powers in respect of the Haddington Island traffic separation scheme, then I probably would not have intervened in
I I disregard Mr. Buchanan's statement in his affidavit that Burrill is not a departmental officer. This is a question, in this case, to be decided by the Court.
2 See the excerpt from the Yarmolinsky case quoted above.
this matter. Equally, if, for example, the Attor ney General had nominated, in this case, the appropriate Deputy Minister, I do not think the plaintiff could have succeeded in its application.
The plaintiff is entitled to its costs of this motion.
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