Judgments

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T-2736-83
Jacques Beauchamp (Plaintiff) v.
Coastal Corporation and the Ship Wayward Prin cess (Defendants)
Trial Division, Reed J.—Toronto, February 27 and 28, 1984.
Practice — Motion to strike pleadings — Motion for order striking out portion of statement of claim seeking specific performance and for order releasing ship from arrest — Plaintiff indicating in writing intention to drop claim for specific performance but to claim damages — Affidavit evi dence that plaintiff now intending to pursue specific perform ance claim — Defendants claiming plaintiff abandoned specif ic performance claim and therefore Court without jurisdiction over damages claim alone — Portion of statement of claim should not be struck if uncertainty whether plaintiffs claim for specific performance could succeed at trial — Issue wheth er letter annulling plaintiff's claim for specific performance not beyond doubt — Argument required on whether initial election for one means of redress precluding subsequent change of choice, in absence of material detriment to defendant arising from change in position — Full examination of whether letter alone constituting election required — Jurisdiction issue also requiring full argument — Application dismissed — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, RR. 406, 419 — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 22(2)(a).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
REFERRED TO:
Tanenbaum v. Sears, [1972] S.C.R. 67; Dobson v. Winton & Robbins Ltd., [1959] S.C.R. 775; Visipak Ltd. v. Deerfield Laminations Ltd., [1973] 1 O.R. 97 (H.C.); Rothschild et al. v. Custodian of Enemy Property, [1945] Ex.C.R. 44; Johnson v. Agnew, [1980] A.C. 367 (H.L.); Antares Shipping Corporation v. The Ship "Capricorn" et al., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 553.
COUNSEL:
T. Bell for plaintiff.
R. G. Newbury for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
T. Bell and Wright & McTaggart, Toronto,
for plaintiff.
R. G. Newbury, Toronto, for defendants.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
REED J.: This is a motion for an order striking out paragraph 10(a) of the plaintiff's statement of claim and for an order that the ship Wayward Princess be released from arrest. The motion is brought either under Rule 419 [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] which provides for the striking out of pleadings or, for an order under Rule 406 stating that the plaintiff has discontinued his action. I do not think Rule 406 applies in this case since it does not seem to contemplate a defendant moving to have a plaintiff's case discontinued.
Paragraph 10(a) of the plaintiff's statement of claim, dated November 17, 1983, reads:
The Plaintiff therefore claims:
(a) specific performance of the Agreement between the Plain tiff and Coastal to sell the Ship to the Plaintiff, requiring Coastal to furnish the Plaintiff with a legal Bill of Sale of the Ship in registerable form, free and clear of all encumbrances, upon payment being made into Court by the Plaintiff of the purchase money less any amount required to discharge regis tered encumbrances.
The main issue between the parties is whether the plaintiff properly tendered, pursuant to the agreement, in order to compel specific perform ance of the agreement of purchase and sale. The ship was subsequently put under warrant of arrest pending determination of the ownership issue.
It is common ground that the ship in question, Wayward Princess, is the only asset of the defend ant and that the defendant is not in a financial position to be able to post a bail bond to obtain release of the ship.
The present application arises because of a letter written to the defendants' solicitors, dated Febru- ary 2, 1984 by John D. Gregory one of the plain tiff's solicitors, part of which reads as follows:
Please note that the Plaintiff will not proceed with his claim for specific performance but will ask the Court for damages only. Since the person who was going to buy the ship from the Plaintiff has cancelled his offer, the ship itself could not be of use to the Plaintiff.
On the hearing of this motion an affidavit signed by John D. Gregory was filed, in which he stated:
On Thursday, the 23rd of February, 1984, I spoke by telephone with Mr. Allan Brock, our instructing solicitor and the corporate solicitor of the Plaintiff herein, at which time Mr. Brock advised me and I verily believe:
(a) that he bas recently fully canvassed with the Plaintiff the Plaintiff's options in respect of his claims for specific perform ance and damages herein;
(b) that contrary to earlier advice and instructions from the Plaintiff, he now wishes to pursue his claim for specific performance of the subject agreement of purchase and sale of the vessel "WAYWARD PRINCESS";
(c) that, accordingly, the plaintiff is and remains ready, willing and able to perform his obligations pursuant to the subject agreement of purchase and sale.
The crux of the defendant's claim is that para graph 10(a) of the statement of claim should be struck out because the plaintiff has abandoned his claim for specific performance. Consequent upon that he contends that this Court has lost jurisdic tion since only the plaintiff's alternative claim for damages would remain, a matter not within this Court's admiralty jurisdiction and, therefore, the ship Wayward Princess should be released from arrest.
In support of his arguments that abandonment has occurred and that in order to obtain specific performance the plaintiff must at all times stand ready and willing to perform the contract counsel for the defendant cited the decisions in Tanen- baum v. Sears, [1972] S.C.R. 67 and Dobson v. Winton & Robbins Ltd., [1959] S.C.R. 775. In addition he argued that the plaintiff's conduct was analogous to an attempt to withdraw an admission of liability found in pleadings. Refer Visipak Ltd. v. Deerfield Laminations Ltd., [1973] 1 O.R. 97 (H.C.). He also argued that an analogy should be drawn to the requirements of a Mareva injunction to justify keeping the ship under arrest.
I do not think the argument by analogy to the withdrawal of admissions made in pleadings or to the requirements of a Mareva injunction are help ful in this case.
I accept the argument made by counsel for the plaintiff that if there is any uncertainty as to whether the plaintiff's claim for specific perform ance could succeed at trial then the relevant por tion of the statement of claim should not be struck
out. In other words, disputed issues of law should not be dealt with on a motion under Rule 419. See Rothschild et al. v. Custodian of Enemy Property, [1945] Ex.C.R. 44.
It remains to consider whether there is a disput ed issue of law here or whether the action of the plaintiff's solicitor in writing to the defendant as described above so clearly and unequivocally annuls any claim the plaintiff might make for specific performance that the issue should not go to trial.
On the basis of the authorities cited to me by counsel for the plaintiff I do not think the issue is so clearly beyond doubt. There is an issue of law which should be fully canvassed at trial and not dealt with in a summary fashion on an interlocuto ry application such as this.
This flows from a number of considerations. In the first place specific performance is an equitable remedy and therefore a discretionary one. In the second place, historically:
... specific performance could be awarded even after a common law action had been commenced. To prevent multi plicity of suit and possible double recovery, the practice was to issue an injunction on the motion of the defendant restraining the suit at law which had the effect of requiring the plaintiff to elect. The practice of granting an equitable remedy despite the plaintiff's action at law may perhaps be explained by the fact that at one time, a separate action at law was required to decide the strictly legal issues. This, however, should not obscure the fact that the court saw it possible to give equitable relief in certain cases even where the plaintiff had indicated initially that damages rather than performance was being sought.
R. J. Sharpe, Injunctions and Specific Perform ance, 1983, pages 403-404, paragraph 789.
Thirdly, the reasoning of Lord Wilberforce in Johnson v. Agnew, [1980] A.C. 367 (H.L.), at page 398, although he did not apply it to the acceptance of a repudiation of a contract, indicates that there is an argument to be made on whether or not an initial election (or option) for one means of redress should preclude a party later altering that choice, in the absence of material detriment to the defendant arising as a result of the change in
position. In addition a full examination should be made as to whether the letter alone, without any action taken by the plaintiff to make specific performance on his part impossible, constitutes an election.
Also, I would be reluctant to determine the issue of the jurisdiction of this Court in a case where the ship is already under arrest, without full argument on that issue including consideration of the Supreme Court's decision in Antares Shipping Corporation v. The Ship "Capricorn" et al., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 553 and the wording of paragraph 22(2)(a) of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10].
These issues might very well be canvassed by way of an application under Rule 474 for a deter mination of a question of law, providing there is no dispute between the parties on the facts. But, they should not be determined in a summary fashion by way of this interlocutory motion.
Accordingly, the application to strike out para graph 10(a) of the statement of claim and release the ship is dismissed.
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