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T-5094-73
Dillingham Corporation Canada Ltd. (Plaintiff)
v.
The Ship Shinyu Maru (Defendant)
Trial Division, Walsh J.—Vancouver, April 23; Ottawa, May 3, 1979.
Practice — Costs — Taxation report contested — Defend ant contending date for currency conversion to be date of certification of bill of costs rather than date of discontinuance of action — Report allowed no pre-judgment interest on amounts expended in providing bail bond, allegedly contrary to admiralty rules — Application for order to vary taxing officer's report — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 40 — Federal Court Rules 345, 406(1).
This is an application by defendant for an order varying the taxing officer's report in two respects. Firstly, the taxing officer established the date for conversion of disbursements made in Japanese yen to Canadian funds as of the date when plaintiff discontinued its action; defendant contends that the conversion date should be the date of certification of the bill of costs. Secondly, the taxing officer did not include any entitlement to pre-judgment interest on the amounts expended in providing a bail bond for the vessel, which, it is claimed, should have been done pursuant to the rules of admiralty law.
Held, the application is allowed in part. Since costs are not a fixed amount, although they are determinable, and the amount can only be determined by their taxation, converting the amounts expressed in Japanese yen to Canadian dollars as of that date, it is more equitable to choose the date of certification of the bill of costs as the appropriate conversion date. The fact that this will prove more costly to the plaintiff is not a fact which should be taken into consideration, as the Japanese yen might have fallen in value in relation to the Canadian dollar in the interval instead of increasing in value, and the decision would have to be the same. An appropriate date for conversion is the date on which the amount to be paid can be ascertained and payment made. There is no precedent allowing any interest on expenditures incurred in the course of an action which can eventually be taxed as part of a bill of costs; it is not desirable that this should be allowed on this type of disbursement included in a bill of costs, however substantial it may be. A special order concerning costs, pursuant to Rule 344(7), would be inapplicable in this case for such an order relates primarily to party and party costs as set out in Tariff B. It is purely academic whether this additional claim could be made on appeal from the decision of the taxing officer in which the claim was not made.
Schorsch Meier GmbH v. Hennin [1975] 1 All E.R. 152, distinguished. Miliangos v. George Frank (Textiles) Ltd [1975] 3 All E.R. 801, distinguished. Services Europe Atlantique Sud (SEAS) v. Stockholms Rederiaktiebolag SVEA [ 1978] 2 All E.R. 764, distinguished. Owners of the mv Eleftherotria v. Owners of the mv "Despina R" [1977] 3 All E.R. 874, distinguished. The Bell Telephone Co. of
Canada—Bell Canada v. The 'Mar-Tirenno" [1974] 1 F.C. 294, distinguished.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
J. T. Sleeves for plaintiff. B. S. Lee for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Russell & DuMoulin, Vancouver, for plain tiff.
Campney & Murphy, Vancouver, for defend ant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
WALSH J.: This is an application by defendant for an order varying the taxing officer's report dated March 9, 1979, in two respects.
1. The taxing officer established the date for the conversion of the disbursements made in Japanese yen to Canadian funds as of the date when plain tiff discontinued its action namely November 30, 1976, whereas defendant contends that the date of conversion should have been the date of certifica tion of the bill of costs.
2. The taxing officer did not include any entitle ment to pre-judgment interest on the amounts expended in providing a bail bond for the vessel which defendant claims should have been done pursuant to the rules of admiralty law.
The claim for costs arose because plaintiff's action instituted on December 12, 1973 for alleged damage done by defendant ship to concrete cais sons belonging to plaintiff was discontinued on November 30, 1976. Defendant had contested the action and had brought a counterclaim for the expenses of providing a bail bond of $250,000 in Canadian funds in lieu of arrest of the vessel. Following the notice of discontinuance negotia tions took place with a view to settling defendant's claim for costs which proved unsuccessful. Defend ant then decided, instead of proceeding with the counterclaim, to tax the bill of costs.
The bond was obtained by defendant furnishing a letter of credit in Japanese yen in Japan which was converted to a letter of credit by the Royal Bank of Canada in Canada. Additional bonding charges became payable each year and there were various charges for handling commission by the Banks, telexes, cables and telephone charges and so forth. Certain charges for divers and surveyors were also paid in yen, the conversion taking place at the time of payment. The total in yen amounted to 2,743,000.60 yen on defendant's bill of costs submitted for taxation. Defendant converted this to Canadian currency at the rate in effect on October 25, 1978, the amount being $18,381.50.
The taxing officer found that the costs became payable on November 30, 1976 the day the notice of discontinuance was filed. He allowed the inclu sion of the costs of bail in the taxable costs how ever as a result of the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in No. A-68-76 Antares Shipping Corporation v. The "Capricorn".'
Defendant relies on Rules 406(1) and 345 of the Court which read respectively as follows:
Rule 406. (1) The plaintiff may, at any time before service of the defendant's defence, or after service thereof before taking any other proceeding in the action (other than an interlocutory application), by filing and serving an appropriate notice in writing, wholly discontinue his action or withdraw any particu lar claim made by him, and thereupon he shall pay the defend ant's costs of the action, or, if the action be not wholly discontinued, the defendant's costs occasioned by the matter so withdrawn. Such costs, if they cannot be agreed on, may be taxed.
Rule 345. Where, under Rule 406, a plaintiff by notice in writing and without leave either wholly discontinues his action against any defendant or withdraws any particular claim made by him therein against any defendant, the defendant may tax his costs of the action or his costs occasioned by the matter withdrawn, as the case may be, and, if the taxed costs are not paid within 4 days after taxation, may enforce payment thereof as if he had been granted judgment therefor.
contending that the costs only become payable after taxation in the event of disagreement be tween the parties as to the amount. Since it is not until taxation that the amount is definitively estab lished and that payment can be enforced, that is the date at which conversion should be made.
' [1977] 2 F.C. 274.
Plaintiff contends that this Court should only fix amounts payable in Canadian funds and that it is inappropriate to consider costs in any foreign cur rency of obtaining these funds. It is not the number of yen which could be purchased in Canadian dollars at any given date which is the issue however, but rather the converse. Defendant was forced to expend certain amounts of yen at various dates to obtain the Canadian dollars required to obtain and keep the bail bond in effect until the discontinuance. Defendant now seeks reimbursements of the same amount in yen, and requires a judgment from the Court expressed in Canadian dollars establishing how many Canadian dollars will now be required to fully reimburse defendant for the expenditures made from time to time in Japanese yen. Plaintiff contends that costs become due when a judgment is rendered award ing them, or, in the case of a discontinuance as at present, become payable to the other party forth with upon the discontinuance, and that section 40 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, provides for interest at the rate prescribed by the Interest Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-18, on a judgment from the date it was rendered, this being the date at which the amount of the claim and the amount to be allowed as costs is determined or becomes determinable.
It is common ground between the parties that the question has never been dealt with in Canadian courts but there is some British authority arising out of the European common market dealing with the right of the courts to take exchange fluctua tions into consideration. Reference was made to the case of Schorsch Meier GmbH v. Henning in which Lord Denning stated at pages 155-156:
Why have we in England insisted on a judgment in sterling and nothing else? It is, I think, because of our faith in sterling. It was a stable currency which had no equal. Things are different now. Sterling floats in the wind. It changes like a weathercock with every gust that blows. So do other currencies. This change compels us to think again about our rules. I ask myself: why do we say that an English court can only pro nounce judgment in sterling? Lord Reid in the Havana case thought that it was primarily procedural. I think so too. It arises from the form in which we used to give judgment for money. From time immemorial the courts of common law used to give judgment in these words: `It is adjudged that the plaintiff do recover against the defendant £X in sterling.'
2 [1975] 1 All E.R. 152.
After pointing out that the form of judgment has now been altered he states at page 156:
It is perfectly legitimate to order the defendant to pay the German debt in deutschmarks. He can satisfy the judgment by paying the deutschmarks; or, if he prefers, he can satisfy it by paying the equivalent sum in sterling, that is, the equivalent at the time of payment. [Emphasis mine.]
In the case of Miliangos v. George Frank (Tex- tiles) Ltd 3 Lord Wilberforce stated at page 809:
The situation as regards currency stability has substantially changed even since 1961. Instead of the main world currencies being fixed and fairly stable in value, subject to the risk of periodic re- or de-valuations, many of them are now `floating' i.e. they have no fixed exchange value even from day to day. This is true of sterling. This means that, instead of a situation in which changes of relative value occurred between the 'breach-date' and the date of judgment or payment being the exception, so that a rule which did not provide for this case could be generally fair, this situation is now the rule. So the search for a formula to deal with it becomes urgent in the interest of justice.
and again at page 810:
If an award in a foreign currency case can be readily enforced, after conversion into a sterling sum, and since an award is enforceable as a judgment, it should follow that a judgment in a foreign currency can be similarly enforced, after conversion into a sterling sum.... But if I am faced with the alternative of forcing commercial circles to fall in with a legal doctrine which has nothing but precedent to commend it or altering the doctrine so as to confirm with what commercial experience has worked out, I know where my choice lies. The law should be responsive as well as, at times, enunciatory, and good doctrine can seldom be divorced from sound practice.
Counsel for plaintiff points out that the Milian- gos case dealt with an action for a sum of money due under a contract, as did the case of Services Europe Atlantique Sud (SEAS) v. Stockholms Rederiaktiebolag SVEA, 4 in which Lord Denning again held at page 771:
The general principle to be derived from the case is, there fore, that, when the plaintiff is entitled to damages calculated by the expenditure of money or loss of hire or wages, then, whether the claim is for breach of contract or for tort, the award or judgment should be given for the plaintiff in the currency which most truly expresses his loss and interest should run from the date of the expenditure or the loss of hire or wages to the date of the award or judgment.
In a tort case, that of the Owners of the my
[1975] 3 All E.R. 801. ° [1978] 2 All E.R. 764.
Eleftherotria v. Owners of the my "Despina R" 5 the judgment states at page 897:
We were asked to take into account the unfairness to the rest of those who live in England and suffer the effects of inflation if plaintiffs who suffer loss and damage in foreign currencies are favoured by English courts with special protection against inflation. That may seem unfair; but it is fair compensation to the injured plaintiff for the wrong which he has suffered. That according to Lord Wilberforce must be the object of the court's decision on what amount of damages to award him.
All of these cases dealt with conversion however of a judgment awarding damages for tort or breach of contract. We are not dealing here with the situation in which defendant would be placed respecting conversion date had defendant con tinued with the cross-demand. I am not called upon to decide whether the judgment would then have expressed in Canadian dollars the total of sums expended in Japanese yen at various times during the proceedings in connection with the bail bond and other matters, nor whether interest to date of judgment could have been claimed in the proceedings on the cross-demand which defendant now claims in its subsidiary argument. It would appear however that whatever sums were awarded as a result of such cross-demand would be estab lished at the date of judgment, and if the judgment were expressed in terms of Canadian dollars as it most probably should be, the conversion would be calculated as of that date and interest at the legal rate would only run from that date. The defendant has chosen to merely tax the costs, which is evi dently a simpler and more logical procedure, but the question arises as to whether it has the same effect.
It appears to me that since costs are not a fixed amount, although they are determinable, and the amount can only be determined by taxation of same, converting the amounts expressed in Japa- nese yen to Canadian dollars as of that date, it is more equitable to choose the date of certification of the bill of costs as the appropriate conversion date. The fact that this will prove more costly to plaintiff is not a fact which should be taken into consideration, as the Japanese yen might have fallen in value in relation to the Canadian dollar in the interval instead of increasing in value, and the decision would have to be the same. An appropri ate date for conversion appears to me to be the
5 [1977] 3 All E.R. 874.
date on which the amount to be paid can be ascertained and payment made.
On the question of interest defendant attempts to equate the allowance of interest on the amounts disbursed from time to time in connection with the bail bond to the allowance of interest on damages awarded in Admiralty Court from the date of expenditure at commercial rates rather than the legal rate.
Reference was made to the case of The Bell Telephone Company of Canada—Bell Canada v. The `Mar-Tirenno" 6 .
In the trial judgment Addy J. stated at page 311:
It is clear that this Court, under its admiralty jurisdiction, has the right to award interest as an integral part of the damages suffered by the plaintiff regardless of whether the damages arose ex contractu or ex delicto.
The Admiralty Courts, in the exercise of their jurisdiction, proceeded upon different principles from that on which the common law authorities were founded; the principle in this instance being a civil law one, to the effect that, when payment is not made, interest is due to the obligee ex mora of the obligor. Refer Canadian General Electric Co. Ltd. v. Pickford & Black Ltd. ((1971) 20 D.L.R. (3rd) 432 at page 436); Canadian Brine Limited v. The Scott Misener ([1962] Ex.C.R. 441) and the authorities stated therein at pages 450 to 452.
and again at page 312:
... interest in these cases is not awarded to the plaintiff as punitive damages against the defendant but as part and parcel of that portion for which the defendant is responsible of the initial damage suffered by the harmed party and it constitutes a full application of the principle of restitutio in integrum. See The Kong Magnus ([1891] P. 223 at page 236); The Joannis Vatis (No. 2) ([1922] P. 213 at page 223); and The North- umbria ((1869) L.R. 3 A. & E. 6 at pages 10 and 14).
At page 313 he refers to the statement of Lord Denning M.R. approved by Jackett P. as he then was in the case of Canadian General Electric Co. v. The "Lake Bosomtwe" 7 :
(a) When a profit earning ship was sunk in a collision, the Court of Admiralty awarded interest on the value of the ship ... from the date of the loss to the date of the trial,
(b) When a ship was not sunk, but only damaged, the Court of Admiralty awarded interest on the cost of repairs, but only from the time that the repair bill was actually paid, because
6 [1974] 1 F.C. 294, affirmed in appeal [1976] 1 F. C. 539.
7 [1970] Ex.C.R. 552 at p. 558.
that was the date from which the plaintiff had been out of pocket, and
(c) Where there was loss of life in a collision, the Court of Admiralty allowed interest only from the date of a registrar's report.
Further support for the allowance of interest is found in the judgment of Lord Denning in the Services Europe Atlantique Sud v. Stockholms case (supra) in a statement at page 769:
We have today to consider a familiar kind of damage, namely expense incurred by a plaintiff in consequence of the defendant's breach of contract or his tort. In English law, both in tort and in contract, a plaintiff is often entitled to be compensated for his actual expenditure on repairs, or his actual loss of wages or of hire. In such cases when dealing in sterling, the award in his favour gives him the very sums he has expended together with interest from the date of payment or of loss, up to the date of the judgment. [Emphasis mine.]
While it is true that expenditures for a bail bond are similar to expenditures for repairs to a vessel in that in both cases the party making the expendi ture has to await judgment before he can recover in absence of an agreement or settlement, it must again be emphasized that we are not here dealing with defendant's claim as set out in its counter claim but with taxation of a bill of costs since the jurisprudence has now held that costs incurred in connection with a bail bond can be included as an expense item. Many expenditures are incurred in the course of an action which can eventually be taxed as part of a bill of costs, but there is as far as I am aware no precedent allowing any interest on them from the time of expenditure to the date of taxation, and I do not believe that it is desirable that this should be allowed on this one type of disbursement included in a bill of costs, however substantial it may be.
While provision is made under Rule 344(7) for the Court at the time of a return of a motion for judgment, to make a special order concerning costs this would be inapplicable in the present case. Such an order relates primarily to party and party costs as set out in Tariff B.
Section 2(2)(b) of Tariff B states:
2. (2) ...
(b) such other disbursements may be allowed as were essential for the conduct of the action.
and its was on this basis that the expense of giving bail was included in the taxable costs in the Antares case (supra).
It appears to be a substantial further step how ever to allow interest on these expenses on taxation when no interest is allowed on any other expense items appearing in a taxation of a bill of costs.
Moreover as has frequently been pointed out costs are not intended to provide full and complete compensation to the party to whom they are awarded.
It was further argued that no claim for interest was made before the taxing officer when the bill of costs was submitted for taxation, and this cannot be done now since the present proceeding is an appeal from his taxation. While Rule 344 provides that the costs of and incidental to all proceedings shall be in the discretion of the Court and the Court may award a fixed or lump sum in lieu of taxed costs, bills of costs as such are not taxed by the Court.
As I have concluded, as indicated, that interest should not be allowed on these disbursements in any event, it is purely academic whether this addi tional claim could be made on appeal from the decision of the taxing officer in which the claim was not made.
This portion of defendant's claim will therefore be dismissed. As defendant has succeeded in the main part of its motion however, and a new and important issue was raised defendant is entitled to costs on the motion.
ORDER
The taxing officer's report of March 9, 1979 is varied so as to set the date for conversion of the disbursements in Japanese yen to Canadian funds as of the date of the said report rather than the date of the notice of discontinuance on November 30, 1976. Pre-judgment interest on the disburse ments of the defendant from the date of said disbursements to the date of judgment is not allowed. Costs of the motion to revise the taxing officer's report are allowed to defendant.
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