Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-4794-77
Mona Lisa Incorporated (Plaintiff) v.
The Ship Carola Reith and her Owners, Parten- reederei M.S. Carola Reith, Intercast S.A., Cast North America Limited, Cast Europe, N.V., Rich- mond Shipping Limited and Cast Shipping Lim ited (Defendants)
Trial Division, Dubé J.—Montreal, March 5; Ottawa, March 16, 1979.
Practice — Service — Application to set aside service because no personal or proper service effected pursuant to law — Service effected for all defendants by delivering and leaving copy with receptionist of defendant Cast North America Lim ited — Whether or not proper service was effected on all or any of defendants — Federal Court Rules 304, 309(2), 310(1), 1002(5) — Quebec Code of Civil Procedure, art. 130.
These are two similar motions, one by the defendant ship Carola Reith and her owners and the other by the remaining defendants, to file a conditional appearance and to set aside service of plaintiff's statement of claim on the ground that "no personal or proper service was made as required by law". The affidavit of service attached to the statement of claim stated that service was effected "by delivering to and leaving the said certified copy with ... the receptionist of the Cast North America Ltd." The issue to be determined, therefore, is wheth er or not proper service was effected on all or any of the defendants.
Held, the service effected on Cast North America Limited is valid, but the service effected on all the other defendants must be set aside. Rule 1002 applies to the action in rem against the Carola Reith. Obviously the ship is not a person or a corpora tion to which Rule 309 dealing with personal service, or Rule 310 with reference to substitutional service, would apply. The applicable Rule 1002(5) is mandatory. The service of the statement of claim as against the ship is contrary to the Rules and ought to be set aside. Although the affidavit does not describe the receptionist of Cast North America Limited as being "the person apparently in charge, at the time of the service", it can be sensibly inferred that she could appear to the process server to be a person with authority to deal with such matters. In view of the liberal interpretation given Quebec's service procedure rules and in light of Rule 2(2), the Court would be very reluctant "to end prematurely the normal advancement" of this case on the sole ground that the affidavit of service did not specify that the receptionist appeared to the process server to be "the person ... in charge". For the remaining defendants substitutional service under Rule 310(2) may be effected only when the prospective defendants in the ordinary course of business enter into transactions in Canada, regularly make use of the services of the persons served, and actually made use of that person served for the purposes of the
transaction in question. The Court cannot presume the exist ence of all these elements without the benefit of an affidavit.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
Laurent Fortier for plaintiff.
Gerald P. Barry for defendants the Ship Carola Reith and her Owners, Partenreederei M.S. Carola Reith.
Robert Cypihot for defendants Intercast S.A., Cast North America Limited, Cast Europe, N.V., Richmond Shipping Limited and Cast Shipping Limited.
SOLICITORS:
Stikeman, Elliott, Tamaki, Mercier & Robb, Montreal, for plaintiff.
McMaster Meighen, Montreal, for defendants the Ship Carola Reith and her Owners, Par- tenreederei M.S. Carola Reith.
Brisset, Bishop, Davidson & Davis, Montreal, for defendants Intercast S.A., Cast North America Limited, Cast Europe, N.V., Rich- mond Shipping Limited and Cast Shipping Limited.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
DuBÉ. J.: These are two similar motions, one by the defendant ship Carola Reith and her owners and the other by the remaining defendants, to file a conditional appearance and to set aside service of plaintiff's statement of claim. The following rea sons apply to both motions.
In its statement of claim in rem and in perso- nam plaintiff says that it was the owner of a certain shipment of Plasticware which was received by the defendants on board the vessel Carola Reith at the port of Antwerp, Belgium, on or about the 7th day of March 1976, under clean board bill of lading, to be delivered at the Port of Montreal, Canada. Plaintiff further alleges that the said cargo was discharged in short and
damaged condition and that it suffered damage in the amount of $3,423.75.
In their motions defendants seek an order to set aside service of the statement of claim on the ground that "no personal or proper service was made as required by law".
In his affidavit of service attached to the state ment of claim Reynold Lewke says that he did on the 5th day of September 1978 serve the above named defendants "by delivering to and leaving the said certified copy with Miss Ginette Leduc, the receptionist of the Cast North America Ltd."
It must be determined, therefore, whether proper service was effected on all or any of the defendants.
Firstly, as to the service upon the ship Carola Reith. It being an action in rem the applicable Rule is 1002(5)(a) which reads:
Rule 1002. .. .
(5) In an action in rem, the statement of claim or declara tion shall be served
(a) upon a ship, or upon cargo, freight or other property, if the cargo or other property is on board a ship, by attaching a certified copy of the statement of claim or declaration to the main mast or the single mast, or to some other conspicuous part of the ship, and leaving the same attached thereto;
Obviously the ship is not a person or a corpora tion to which Rule 309 dealing with personal service, or Rule 310 with reference to substitution- al service, would apply. The applicable Rule 1002(5) is mandatory. In The "Mesis" v. Louis Wolfe & Sons (Vancouver) Ltd.', the Chief Justice of this Court had this to say at page 435:
Whatever the correct view of the nature of a Canadian Admi ralty action in rem is, in my view, Rule 307 does not authorize the Rule 1002 type of service out of the jurisdiction. In my view, not only is Rule 307 applicable only to service on a legal person but, having regard to the mandatory requirements of Rule 1002(5), Rule 1001 does not make Rule 307 applicable to the service of a statement of claim in an action in rem.
' [1977] 1 F.C. 429.
It is very clear, therefore, that the service of the statement of claim as against the ship is contrary to the Rules and ought to be set aside.
Secondly, does service on a receptionist consti tute personal service upon a corporation? Under Rule 304 originating documents must be served personally, unless substitutional service is ordered under Rule 310(1). Rule 309(2) prescribes the ways in which personal service upon a corporation may be effected.
Rule 309. .. .
(2) Personal service of a document upon a corporation is effected by leaving a certified copy of the document
(a) in the case of a municipal corporation, with the warden, reeve, mayor or clerk,
(b) in any case other than a municipal corporation,
(i) with the president, manager, or other head officer, the treasurer, the secretary, the assistant treasurer, the assist ant secretary, any vice-president, or any person employed by the corporation in a legal capacity, or
(ii) with the person apparently in charge, at the time of the service, of the head office or of the branch or agency in Canada where the service is effected, or
(c) in the case of any corporation, with any person discharg ing duties for the particular corporation comparable to those of an officer falling within subparagraph (a) or (b) (i),
or by such other method as may be provided by statute for the particular case or as is provided for service of a document on a corporation for the purposes of a superior court in the province ,where the service is being effected.
Miss Leduc is not a person described in Rule 309(2)(b)(i): she is a receptionist. The affidavit aforementioned does not describe her as a person "apparently in charge", or a "person discharging duties ... comparable to those of an officer", although she may conceivably have appeared to be "in charge" to the process server.
However, Rule 309(2) does further provide that personal service upon a corporation may be effect ed "by such other method as may be provided by statute for the particular case or as is provided ... for the purposes of a superior court in the province where the service is being effected". Article 130 of the Code of Civil Procedure . of the Province of Quebec prescribes somewhat the same type of
service as Rule 309 of the Federal Court of Canada. The article reads:
130. Service upon a corporation as defined in the Civil Code is made at its head; office, at its business office in the province, or at the office of its agent in the district where the cause of action has arisen, speaking to any officer or to a person in charge of the said office.
If the corporation has no business office in the Province of Québec and no agent having his office in the district where the cause of action has arisen, service may be made upon one of the officers of the corporation or upon any person mentioned as such in the last annual report submitted to the Minister of Consumer Affairs, Cooperatives and Financial Institutions under the Companies Information Act.
Counsel for plaintiff, however, relies on the new article 2 of the Code which provides that the provisions of the Code must be interpreted in such a way as to "facilitate rather than to delay or to end prematurely the normal advancement of cases". He then refers the Court to several Quebec decisions 2 to the effect that, where the defendants have not been prejudiced by irregular service, then the irregularity is cured by the appearance of the defendants in Court. He alleges that whereas defendants have not suffered any prejudice because of the irregularity of service, the plaintiff would suffer irreparable damage if service were to be set aside: the action is based on a bill of lading and would be prescribed under the Hague Rules limiting such actions to a period of one year.
The Federal Court Rules include an interpreta tion Rule to the same effect. Rule 2(2) provides that "These Rules are intended to render effective the substantive law and to ensure that it is carried out; and they are to be so interpreted and applied as to facilitate rather than to delay or to end prematurely the normal advancement of cases".
There is however, as counsel for the defendants points out, Federal Court jurisprudence to the effect that an attempted service of process not in accordance with the Rules of Court may result in such service being set aside.
2 Dame Gauthier v. Lacroix [1951] B.R. 473. United Motors Limited v. Marine Transport Co. S.A. [1968] C.S. 306. Lamarre v. La Municipalité de St-Paul de l'fle aux Noix [1969] R.P. 310.
In MCA Canada Ltd. v. Robert Simpson Productions 3 , Heald J. held that the plaintiff had not shown that service on a corporation controller was within the Court Rule governing service on corporations. He said this at page 448:
The affidavit of service by Donald Lewis Marston, student- at-law, is to the effect that service was on Mr. Douglas Longstaff "who is in the capacity of comptroller with said corporate defendant". There is no evidence before me on which I could possibly conclude that said Douglas Longstaff is one of the persons covered by Rule 309(2)(b)(i).
Nor does Rule 309(2)(b)(ii) assist the plaintiffs. This Rule is an alternative to Rule 309(2)(b)(i) and permits service on:
... the person apparently in charge, at the time of the service, of the head office or of the branch or agency in Canada where the service is effected, ...
There is nothing in Mr. Donald Marston's affidavit of service or anywhere else in the evidence before me from which I could sensibly infer or assume that said Douglas Longstaff was "the person apparently in charge at the time of the service".
There are no words in Reynold Lewke's affida vit which would describe Miss Leduc as being "the person apparently in charge, at the time of the service", but one could sensibly infer that the lady could appear to the process server, as well as to any casual visitor, to be a person with authority to deal with such matters. Bearing in mind the liberal interpretation given the service procedure rules in the Province of Quebec, as already referred to, and in the light of our own Rule 2(2), I would be very reluctant "to end prematurely the normal advance ment" of this case on the sole ground that the affidavit of service did not specify that Miss Leduc appeared to the process server to be "the person ...in charge".
Thirdly, may such service on defendant Cast North America Limited be considered proper ser vice on the other defendants, all non-resident corporations?
The normal procedure with reference to those non-residents would have been to apply for service
3 [1971] F.C. 445.
ex juris under Rule 307. Plaintiff, however, attempted to effect substitutional service under
Rule 310(2) which reads:
Rule 310. .. .
(2) Where a person resident outside Canada who, in the ordinary course of his business, enters into contracts in Canada or enters into business transactions in Canada (as, for example, when a carrier receives goods in Canada for transport to some place outside Canada) and, in that connection, regularly makes use of the services of a person or persons resident in Canada, is sued in respect of any cause of action arising out of such a contract or transaction, personal service of the statement of claim or declaration or other document in the action upon any such person whose services the defendant actually made use of in connection with the contract or transaction in question shall be deemed to be personal service on the defendant as though an order had been duly made for substitutional service in that manner in the particular case.
There is nothing in the affidavit of service to the effect that Cast North America Limited is a person whose services the other defendants make use of on a regular basis and is a person whose services the defendants actually made use of in connection with the transaction in question. There is nothing in the statement of claim which would indicate the relationship between the several defendants. Paragraph 2 of the statement of claim does recite that the defendants are "common carri ers by water for hire, were the owners, operators, managers and charterers of the vessel Carola Reith and, carriers of the said shipment", but nothing more. No affidavit having been filed at the hearing of the motion by any of the parties, the Court is limited to those two documents: the state ment of claim and the affidavit of service.
Paragraph 3 of the statement of claim does refer to bill of lading number G 010 and counsel for plaintiff attempted in his written argument to file the bill of lading in order to show the respective roles played by the several defendants. But the Rules of the Federal Court do not permit such filing of evidence at that stage, or at any previous stage during the hearing of a motion, without a proper affidavit.
Rule 310(3) provides that where service is effected under 310(2) there shall be attached to the endorsement "a separate ... notice to that effect setting out the provisions of paragraph (2)
in full". Plaintiff did set out on the back of his statement of claim the full paragraph (2) in accordance with the Rule.
In my view, however, that is not sufficient where nothing appears either in the affidavit of service, or in the statement of claim itself, to the effect that the person served does enter into business transactions in the ordinary course of business with the defendants and that the defendants actu ally made use of that person's service in connection with the transaction in question. Moreover, the Rule is limited to contracts entered into in Canada, or business transactions in Canada, whereas paragraph 3 of the statement of claim refers to a bill of lading dated at Dusseldorf in Germany and a shipment received on board at Antwerp, Belgium. That paragraph does refer to a delivery at Montreal, Canada, but it cannot be inferred from the mere reading of the statement of claim that the person served actually provided services in that connection.
Counsel for the defendants rightly points out that the question of whether valid service has been effected upon these non-resident defendants is not merely one of procedure, but goes to the very question of jurisdiction of the Court over the par ties. In principle, the jurisdiction of this Court extends only to those persons within the territorial jurisdiction of Canada. Only by strict compliance with statutory or other provisions having the force of law (e.g. Rules of Court) may jurisdiction be acquired over non-residents. The Quebec Code method of service made to apply under Rule 309 does not apply under Rule 310 providing substitu- tional service in regard to persons residing outside Canada.
In my view, the requirements of Rule 310(2) must be strictly adhered to. Substitutional service may only be effected under these provisions when the prospective defendants in the ordinary course of business enter into transactions in Canada, regularly make use of the services of the persons served, and actually made use of the services of that person served for the purposes of the transac tion in question. The existence of all these ele ments cannot be presumed by the Court without the benefit of an affidavit. It necessarily follows
that service upon the non-resident defendants must be set aside.
ORDER
It is hereby ordered that the service effected on Cast North America Limited is valid and that the service effected on all the other defendants be set aside. Costs of the two motions to the defendants.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.