Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-845-90
Banco do Brasil S.A. (Appellant) (Defendant) v.
Pan American Steamship Lines Inc. and Europe- Overseas Steamship Lines N.V. (Respondents) (Plaintiffs)
INDEXED AS.' BANCO DO BRASIL SA. V. ALEXANDROS G. TSA vwIRIS (THE) (CA.)
Court of Appeal, Isaac C.J., Heald and Marceau B.A. —Vancouver, April 6; Ottawa, August 14, 1992.
Maritime law — Torts — Appeal from Trial Division judg ment awarding damages for wrongful interference with con tracts relating to chartering of vessel and carriage of cargo — Owners failing to make mortgage payments when due — Ship time chartered to respondents — Bank threatening to arrest ship in Panama when informed of time charter and planned destinations — Ship arrested in Canada and sold under Court order — Respondents alleging refusal by Bank to permit voy age through Panama Canal on reasonable terms — Whether Bank's conduct negligence and wrongfully inducing breach of charterparties and bill of lading contracts — Trial Judge rely ing upon The Myrto case in concluding conduct actionable in Canada as tort if engaged in here — Tort of intimidation explained — Trial Judge erring in law in applying principles of The Myrto — Bank's conduct not actionable in Canada if engaged in here.
Conflict of laws — Appeal from Trial Division decision awarding damages for breach of charterparties, bill of lading contracts — Whether appellant's conduct amounting to tort of negligence — Trial Judge applying hoice of law rule — Rule generally applicable to foreign tort ac ns in Canada — Trial Judge's conclusion appellant's conduct a tunable in Canada as tort if engaged in here based on principles of The Myrto — Facts in The Myrto different from those herein — Tort of intim idation defined — Author, case law considered — Tort of intimidation not to be determined solely on basis of principles in The Myrto — Appellant having legal right to arrest ship in default of mortgage payments — No intention of injuring respondents — No actionable wrong in Canada.
This was an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division awarding respondents damages for wrongful interference with contracts relating to the chartering of the vessel Alexandros G. Tsavliris and the carriage of its cargo. The owners of the Alex- andros and its sister ship, the Claire A. Tsavliris, having failed to make payments due under a mortgage, the Bank to which it had been assigned enforced its rights as mortgagee by arresting the Claire and by threatening to do the same with respect to the Alexandros. Meanwhile, the respondents chartered the Alexan- dros on a time charter for a voyage from Europe to the west coast of the United States and Canada. After long and unsuc cessful negotiations between the charterers and the Bank's rep resentatives as to whether the Bank should forego its right to arrest the Alexandros in the Panama Canal, the respondents instructed the Alexandros to proceed around Cape Horn to Los Angeles. The day following her arrival in New Westminster, British Columbia, the ship was arrested and subsequently sold pursuant to a Court order. In the Trial Division, the respon dents alleged, inter alia, that the Bank had refused to permit the voyage of the Alexandros to proceed on reasonable terms by transit through the Panama Canal and had, thereby, wrong fully induced breach of their charterparties and of the bill of lading contracts. The Trial Judge ruled in their favour. Upon appeal, the main issue was whether the Trial Judge erred in concluding that the Bank committed tort against the respon dents by disclosing to the owners that solicitors had been instructed to enforce the Bank's rights against the Alexandros at the earliest opportunity and then preparing to do so in Pan- ama.
Held, the appeal should be allowed.
Confronted with an allegation of a foreign tort, the Trial Judge was required to decide first, the choice of law rule appli cable and, secondly, whether the Bank's conduct rendered it liable to the respondents. Strayer J. applied the choice of law rule generally applicable to foreign tort actions in Canada. In concluding that the Bank's conduct would have been actiona ble in Canada as a tort, if engaged in here, he relied upon the principles of law laid down in The Myrto, which, according to His Lordship, reflected the maritime common law of both England and Canada.
Counsel for the parties were bound by their admissions of fact that the law of England is as stated in The Myrto. But as an admission of the state of the maritime common law of Canada, it is ineffective to bind the Federal Court which is free to deter mine the principles of Canadian law that govern the present case. None of the authorities cited in The Myrto supports the conclusion that there exists in England a special maritime tort of interference with contractual relations which differs in its constituent elements from that which exists under the general law of torts. Strayer J. found that the interference with contrac-
tual relations consisted of threatened arrest and preparations to effect the arrest. In the law of torts, such conduct is best char acterized as intimidation. The principles noted in The Myrto could not, by themselves, determine this case under the domes tic law of England since neither The Myrto nor the authorities relied upon therein were concerned with facts similar to those in the case at bar.
In determining the common law of Canada on the tort of intimidation applicable to this case, the Federal Court must, in admiralty matters, consider only "Canadian maritime law" as defined in section 2 of the Federal Court Act and explained in ITO—International Terminal Operators Ltd. v. Miida Electron ics Inc. et al.
The Trial Judge erred in law in concluding that in Canada the tort of intimidation based on the Bank's conduct fell to be determined solely on the basis of the principles stated in The Myrto. Although those principles helped him in appreciating the limits on the Bank's rights as mortgagee if it chose to exer cise its undoubted right to arrest the Alexandros, they were of no assistance in resolving the dispute as between the Bank and the respondents. There was no doubt that, by the law of the mortgage, the Bank had a legal right to arrest the Alexandros. The communication by the Bank of its intention to exercise its undoubted right of arrest and the taking of preparatory steps to effect such arrest in a jurisdiction that favoured its interest were not unlawful and an action based on those acts would not be maintainable in Canada. There was no evidence that the Bank intended to exercise its right of arrest with the intention of injuring the respondents. A mere threat by the Bank to exer cise those rights without more would not, by the law of Canada, amount to an actionable wrong. Consequently, the Trial Judge erred in law in concluding that the conduct of the Bank would have been actionable in Canada, if engaged in here. Even if the Bank's conduct could be characterized as inducing a breach of contract, the principles laid down in The Myrto do not reflect the common law of Canada in this regard. While conduct which interferes with the performance of a con tract, whether directly or indirectly, may be tortious if done deliberately and with knowledge of the existence of the con tract, it will not be so if the conduct which induced the breach was `justified". The Bank's right to arrest the Alexandros hav ing crystallized, it was justified in informing the respondents of its intention to arrest the ship and in taking steps to do so.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, s. 2.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Morgan v. Fry, [1968] 2 Q.B. 710 (C.A.); ITO—Interna- tional Terminal Operators Ltd. v. Miida Electronics Inc. et al., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 752; (1986), 28 D.L.R. (4th) 641; 34 B.L.R. 251; 68 N.R. 241; Roman Corporation Ltd. et al. v. Hudson's Bay Oil and Gas Co. Ltd. et al., [1973] S.C.R. 820; (1973), 36 D.L.R. (3d) 413; Central Canada Potash Co. Ltd. et al. v. Government of Saskatchewan, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 42; (1978), 88 D.L.R. (3d) 609; [1978] 6 W.W.R. 400; 6 C.C.L.T. 265; 23 N.R. 481.
DISTINGUISHED:
The Myrto, [1977] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 243 (Q.B.D. Adm. Ct.).
REFERRED TO:
De Mattos v. Gibson (1859), 4 De G. & J. 276; 45 E.R. 108 (Rolls Ct.); Collins v. Lamport (1964), 11 L.T. 497 (Ch. D.); The Innisfallen (1866), L.R. 1 A. & E. 72; John- son v. Royal Mail Steam Packet Company (1867), L.R. 3 C. P. 38; Keith v. Burrows (1877), L.R. 2 App. Cas. 636 (H.L.); Cory, Brothers, and Co. v. Stewart (1886), 2 T.L.R. 508 (C.A.); The Blanche (1888), 58 L.T. 592 (P.D. & Adm. Div.); The Fanchon (1880), 5 P. D. 173; The Celtic King, [1894] P. 175; The Heather Bell, [1901] P. 272 (C.A.); Law Guarantee and Trust Society v. Russian Bank for Foreign Trade, [1905] 1 K. B. 815 (CA.); The Manor, [1907] P. 339 (C.A.); The Lord Strathcona, [1925] P. 143; Rookes v. Barnard, [1964] A.C. 1129 (H.L.); Greig v Insole, [1978] 3 All E.R. 449 (Ch. D.); Posluns v. Toronto Stock Exchange and Gardiner, [1964] 2 O.R. 547; (1964), 46 D.L.R. (2d) 210 (H. Ct.).
AUTHORS CITED
Castel, J.-G. Canadian Conflict of Laws, 2nd ed., Toronto:
Butterworths, 1986.
Clerk & Lindsell on Torts, 16th ed., London: Sweet &
Maxwell, 1989.
Fridman on Torts, London: Waterloo Publishers, 1990.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Trial Division ([1990] 3 F.C. 260) awarding damages for wrongful interference with contracts relating to the chartering of a vessel and the carriage of cargo. Appeal allowed.
COUNSEL:
David P. Roberts, Q.C. and R. M. Shore for appellant (defendant).
Nils E. Daugulis and Daniel R. Bennett for respondents (plaintiffs).
SOLICITORS:
Campney & Murphy, Vancouver, for appellant (defendant).
Bull, Housser & Tupper, Vancouver, for respon dents (plaintiffs).
The following are the reasons for judgment ren dered in English by
ISAAC CJ.: This is an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division, [1990] 3 F.C. 260, in two actions, T-1174-87 and T-1381-87 (tried together by order), awarding to the respondents damages (to be deter mined on a reference) against the appellant for wrongful interference with contracts relating to the chartering of the vessel, Alexandros G. Tsavliris and the carriage of cargo on that vessel.
By agreement, the actions were tried on the plead- ings filed in action T-1381-87, an agreed statement of facts and evidence adduced at the trial.
The Facts
In 1974 Panalex Shipping Company ("Panalex") contracted with a Brazilian shipbuilder to construct the Alexandros G. Tsavliris (the "Alexandros") for a price which was secured by promissory notes and a first ship's preferred mortgage. The notes and mort gage were assigned to the appellant. The mortgage and assignment were registered in Greece and were governed by the laws of Greece.
At the same time, Panclaire Shipping Ltd. ("Pan - claire"), a company associated with Panalex through the Tsavliris family, concluded a contract with the same shipbuilder to construct a sister ship, the Claire A. Tsavliris (the "Claire"). The appellant was also the holder of a marine mortgage on the Claire.
When construction was completed, both vessels were registered in Greece and sailed under the Greek flag.
Panalex made payments under the mortgage on the Alexandros up to and including May 18, 1981 and
went into default on November 18, 1981 by failing to make payments then due. A rescheduling of that mortgage debt was agreed to with the appellant on November 16, 1984, but Panalex defaulted two days later by failing to pay the amounts then due. The mortgage on the Claire was also in default.
Panalex made no payments under the mortgage on the Alexandros after November 18, 1984.
On January 10, 1986, Panalex proposed a further rescheduling of the mortgage debt. The appellant rejected this proposal on April 3, 1986, but did not communicate the rejection to Panalex until December 29, 1986, when it required Panalex to pay forthwith all amounts then outstanding.
From April 13, 1986 to January 13, 1987, the Alex- andros was laid up in Greece. On December 8, 1986, the appellant instructed its London solicitors to com mence inquiries as to the whereabouts of the Alexan- dros.
In January 1987, there was owing to the appellant in respect of each vessel an amount exceeding $12,000,000. Under the terms of the mortgages and the law of Greece, the appellant's security became immediately enforceable.
On January 23, 1987, the respondent Pan Ameri- can Steamship Lines Inc. chartered the Alexandros and sub-chartered it to the respondent Europe-Over seas Steamship Lines N.V. (collectively, the "charter- ers") on a time charter for one voyage from Europe to the west coast of the United States and Canada, car rying a cargo of steel products. The estimated date of arrival at its eventual destination in British Columbia was March 16, 1987. The value of the cargo was approximately (U.S.) $12,000,000.
On January 26, 1987, the day after the charterers took delivery of the Alexandros, the appellant learned of the time charter and the planned destinations. The appellant also learned of the whereabouts of the Claire.
On February 12, 1987, the appellant directed that its London solicitors should be instructed to take action to seize both the Claire and the Alexandros, indicating that care should be taken to arrest the Alex- andros in a jurisdiction which "also considers the interest of the Bank [appellant]".
The Alexandros sailed on February 17, 1987 bound for the west coast discharge ports through the Pan- ama Canal which was admitted to be the customary, most efficient, and least costly route for the carriage of goods by sea from Antwerp to Los Angeles.
On February 27, 1987, the Claire was arrested in Durban, South Africa in an action instituted by the appellant on its mortgage.
On the same day the London solicitors for the owners of the Claire and the Alexandros asked the appellant to release the Claire.
On March 2, the appellant's London solicitors replied by telex which, with respect to the Alexan- dros, stated:
You will no doubt appreciate that our clients may also seek to enforce their rights against the "Alexandros G. Tsavliris". We understand that this vessel is presently on a voyage carrying cargo to the U.S. West Coast. Our instructions are to enforce our client's rights against this vessel at the earliest opportunity. It may, however, be the case that we can persuade our clients to defer from acting against the vessel until completion of the present employment. In order that we may take instructions on this question, we shall be grateful if you will provide full details of the present chartering arrangements for that vessel, including confirmation as to the identity of the charterer and advise as to the current obligations under bill of lading con tracts and the order of rotation. [My emphasis.]
On March 3, 1987, a representative of the owners of the two vessels met in London with representatives of the appellant to discuss the release of the Claire and the appellant's position vis-à-vis the Alexandros. The appellant's representatives confirmed that the Claire would not be released. At that meeting and in a subsequent telephone conversation with the appel lant's London solicitor, the representative of the own ers of the two vessels stated that unless the Claire was released, the appellant would not be allowed to
arrest the Alexandros and mentioned the possibility that the Alexandros might be sent to Taiwan instead to be broken up for scrap.
On March 5, 1987, the representative of the own ers telephoned the appellant's London solicitor and asked that the Claire be released. He was advised that the vessel would not be released and that it would be sold. He told the appellant's London solicitor that he "could forget" about the Alexandros.
On the same day, the appellant's London solicitor instructed lawyers in Panama to prepare documents for the arrest of the Alexandros and on March 6, 1987, he instructed them to make the arrest. The war rant for arrest was issued but never served, for rea sons that will later appear.
On March 5, 1987, the owner of the Alexandros instructed that the vessel be stopped in international waters outside the Panama Canal.
On March 6, 1987, the owner sent a telex to the appellant proposing rescheduling of the mortgage debt. On the same day the owner also advised the charterers that he had received information that the appellant would arrest the Alexandros in the Panama Canal and had therefore directed the master to delay arrival at the Canal pending instructions from them.
The charterers' first instructions were that the Alexandros should proceed into the Canal immedi ately but the owners ignored those instructions.
By March 10, 1987, the charterers had reconsid ered their position and instructed the Alexandros to remain outside the Panama Canal.
Thereafter, the owners and the charterers threatened the Bank with "multi-million dollar penal claims", "claims of catastrophic proportions" and the "beginning of an adventure, the consequences of which could not be grasped with any stretch of the [appellant's] imagination", if the appellant did not forego its right to arrest the Alexandros in the Pan-
ama Canal (Appeal Book, Vols. II and III of Common Appendix I, pages 365, 422, 436, 448).
Between March 10 and April 3, 1987 representa tives of the charterers and the appellant attempted to negotiate the conditions under which the appellant would forego its right to arrest the Alexandros in the Panama Canal. Those negotiations broke down in early April 1987, over the following term of a draft agreement:
7. The Charterer undertakes for the Bank's benefit not to bring any claim against the Bank in any jurisdiction in respect of any alleged interference by the Bank with the performance of the Charterparty and the Bill of Lading contracts.
The appellant had insisted upon the inclusion of this term in the agreement, but the respondents refused to agree to it.
In the meantime, the owners' insurance on the Alexandros was cancelled as they refused to pay the premiums due. The appellant was obliged to purchase new insurance for the vessel. The appellant gave the respondents notice of assignment of earnings which it held, but the respondents ignored the notice and con tinued to pay hire to the owners.
On April 4, 1987, the respondents instructed the Alexandros to proceed around Cape Horn to Los Angeles. Pursuant to these instructions, the Alexan- dros circumnavigated South America and arrived in Los Angeles on May 15, 1987 where it completed discharging a consignment of cargo on May 19, 1987.
The Alexandros was arrested in Los Angeles at the instance of the appellant but was released pursuant to an agreement between the appellant and the respon dents.
Thereafter the Alexandros proceeded to Oakland, Portland and Seattle, in the United States of America and to New Westminster, British Columbia, discharg ing cargo in each port.
The vessel arrived in New Westminster on June 2, 1987, some two and one-half months after the origi nal estimated day of arrival. On June 3, 1987, it was arrested and was subsequently sold pursuant to an order of this Court for (Canadian) $3,722,100.
The respondents then commenced an action against the appellant alleging, inter alia, that the appellant had refused to permit the voyage of the Alexandros to be prosecuted on reasonable terms by transit through the Panama Canal, and had, thereby, wrongfully induced breach of their charterparties and of the bill of lading contracts.
The respondents claimed damages in respect of additional expenses to which they were put by reason of the delay and extra distance travelled in the voyage and by the settlement of claims against them by con- signees or receivers because of the delay in delivery of cargo.
As already mentioned, the learned Trial Judge dis posed of both actions by granting judgment for the charterers for damages suffered by them resulting from the breach of the charterparties and, in respect of the respondent, Europe-Overseas Steamship Lines N.V., resulting from the breach of its bill of lading contracts. He ordered, as the parties had agreed, that there should be a reference to ascertain damages.
Objections of the Appellant to the Judgment Appealed from
In his memorandum of fact and law, counsel for the appellant has stated his objections to the judg ment appealed from as follows:
The learned trial judge erred in concluding that:
1. The Bank committed a tort against the charterers, in England, by disclosing to the owners that solicitors were instructed to enforce the Bank's rights against the vessel at the earliest opportunity and then preparing to do so in Pan- ama.
2. The Bank's security was in no way impaired if the Claire was not released.
3. All of the costs incurred by the charterers in consequence of the delay and the vessel's circumnavigation of South
America to avoid the jurisdiction of the Courts of Panama are recoverable from the Bank.
I turn now to consider the first ground of objection.
Whether the learned Trial Judge erred in concluding that the appellant committed a tort against the respon dents, by disclosing to the owners that solicitors were instructed to enforce the appellant's rights against the Alexandros at the earliest opportunity and then pre
paring to do so in Panama.
The Tort
The case pleaded against the appellant in paragraphs 25 to 27 of the statement of claim (Appeal Book, pages 10 and 11) was that the appellant had engaged in conduct outside Canada which amounted to the torts of negligence and wrongfully inducing breach of the charterparty and the bills of lading con
tracts.
In his reasons, the learned Trial Judge made no ref erence to the tort of negligence. He referred only to the tort of wrongfully inducing breach of contract, which he described as wrongful interference with contractual relations. The conduct of the appellant which he characterized as tortious is described in the following passage of his reasons [at pages 272-273]
(Appeal Book, page 31):
I am satisfied that if the acts of the Bank had been committed in Canada they would have amounted to a tort. The essential fact is that the Bank, knowing that the vessel was under charter and bound for the west coast of North America, made it impos sible for the owner to perform the contract in a reasonable time and by the route that was commonly understood to be the intended route, by threatening, and preparing for, the arrest of the vessel in Panama. No doubt, vis-à-vis the owners, it had every right to enforce its mortgage by arrest at any time, the mortgage being badly in arrears. But the common law as expressed in The "Myrto" provides that if a mortgagee elects to exercise those mortgage rights at a time when the vessel is under contract, it will be answerable in tort to the other parties to such contract; this will be the case unless the mortgagee's intervention is justified because that contract impairs its secur ity or because the owner is unwilling or unable to complete the contract. I am unable to conclude that either of those condi tions applied here.
He found that the tortious conduct had occurred in England [at pages 277-278] (Appeal Book, page 37):
Without attempting to define for all purposes the locus of such a tort, it appears to me that in this case it can be regarded as having been committed in London. It was in London on March 2, March 3, and March 5, that the Bank's London solicitors conveyed the threats to the owner's solicitors and to its repre sentative, Mr. Tsavliris, that the Bank would arrest the Alexan- dros when it reached Panama. This was followed up by the London solicitors for the Bank issuing instructions to Panama- nian lawyers on March 5 and 6 to prepare and then to file arrest documents in that country. The evidence indicates the probability, and this was not refuted, that the resulting decision on behalf of the owner to interrupt the voyage was taken by Mr. Tsavliris in London. The evidence also indicates that throughout this time the day-to-day decisions were being taken on behalf of the Bank by Coward Chance, their London solici tors, pursuant to very general instructions given on February 12th to take enforcement action against both the "Claire" and the "Alexandros". I believe these circumstances are sufficient to fix the locus of the tort as England. There are many other factors suggesting England as the dominant jurisdiction, were one to apply the test of the "proper law of the tort". Among these is the fact that the charterparties both provided for arbi tration in London. I am not however adopting that approach.
Confronted with an allegation of a foreign tort, the learned Trial Judge was required to decide first, the choice of law rule applicable and, secondly, whether, applying the relevant law, the appellant's conduct rendered it liable to the respondents.
To answer the first question, the learned Trial Judge applied the choice of law rule generally appli cable to foreign tort actions in Canada. 1 He stated, correctly, in my respectful view, that in order to maintain an action in Canada for a tort committed abroad, the respondents must prove to the requisite degree that the conduct of the appellant which was complained of
(a) would have been actionable as a tort in Canada according to Canadian law, if engaged in here, and
(b) was not justifiable by the law of the place where it was engaged in.
1 See J.-G. Castel, Canadian Conflict of Laws (2nd ed.), Butterworths, 1986.
As I have indicated by reference to the passage quoted from his reasons (Appeal Book, page 31), he concluded that the conduct of the appellant which the respondents complained of would have been actiona ble in Canada as a tort, if engaged in here.
In reaching that conclusion, the learned Trial Judge relied upon and applied principles of law laid down in The Myrto, 2 which, he said, represented both the maritime common law of England and of Canada. His conclusion in this respect appears, from the fol lowing passage in his reasons, to have been influ enced by the positions taken by counsel at trial. He stated [at page 270] (Appeal Book, page 29):
Counsel were unable to cite any Canadian cases on this sub ject. Instead, they agreed that the law of Canada and the law of England are the same, it being assumed that Canadian courts would follow maritime common law as it has developed in England. It was also common ground that the common law lia bility of a ship's mortgagee for interference in the performance of a contract made by a ship's owner for the employment of that ship, is defined in The "Myrto" case ....
In argument before us Mr. Roberts for the appel lant (who was not counsel at trial) denied that there was common ground at trial or that the principles laid down in The Myrto governed this case. Mr. Daugulis for the respondent (also not counsel at trial) con tended that there was common ground. Indeed, in his memorandum of fact and law (Argument, paragraph 4, page 12) Mr. Daugulis states that "It was undis puted that The Myrto ... is the modern, accurate statement of the law". He supported this assertion by reference to the testimony of two witnesses.
Absent a transcript of the argument at trial which would settle the dispute between counsel, I must accept the facts stated in the passage just quoted at face value. To the extent that it contains an admission by counsel for the parties that the principles stated in The Myrto represent the law of England, it is my opinion that counsel are bound by those admissions,
2 [1977] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 243 (Q.B.D. Adm. Ct.), at pp. 253- 254.
the law of England being a fact in issue like any other, the proof of which could be dispensed with by admission of the parties or their counsel. To the extent that it contains an admission respecting the state of the maritime common law of Canada, differ ent considerations arise. The law of Canada was not a fact in issue in the case. It was an element in the case which the learned Trial Judge had sole responsibility to determine. It is true that counsel, by their research and submissions, could have assisted him in the dis charge of that responsibility; but they could not, by their admission, relieve him of it. Consequently, I consider the admission contained in the passage just quoted as being an admission of fact that the law of England is as stated in The Myrto. Indeed that was the conclusion which the learned Trial Judge reached on conflicting expert evidence. As an admission of the state of the maritime common law of Canada, it is ineffective to bind this Court. In my opinion we are free, as the learned Trial Judge was, to determine the principles of Canadian law that govern this case, if we should determine that they differ from what was admitted or from the conclusion of the learned Trial Judge on the point.
Since the learned Trial Judge proceeded on the basis that the principles summarized in The Myrto represented the law of Canada, it might be helpful to consider that case at this point.
In The Myrto, the plaintiffs were merchant bank ers. They held first and second mortgages on a vessel as security for loans made to the owners to pay the purchase price. The owners having defaulted on both mortgages, the plaintiffs commenced an action in rem for repayment of capital and interest thereunder. The plaintiffs arrested the vessel and, in the action, brought an interlocutory application for an order for appraisement and sale of the ship pendente lite. The charterers of the vessel intervened in the action and brought an interlocutory application for the release of the vessel from arrest, alleging that the "arrest of the
vessel by the bank was and continues to be an unlaw ful interference with their contractual rights".
Both applications came on for hearing before Brandon J. (as he then was) who decided to hear and dispose of the charterers' application first because, in his view, the disposition of that application could render the bank's application moot.
In their application, the charterers contended that they were entitled in their own right and quite apart from any defences to the plaintiff's action that the owners might have, to prevent unlawful interference with their charterparty. In deciding that application Brandon J. cited a number of authorities 3 and pur ported to lay down the following principles of law which were said to have been established by them [at pages 253-2541:
(1) The owner is entitled, subject to one exception, to deal with the ship (and that includes employing her under a contract with a third party) in the same way as he would be entitled to do if the ship were not mortgaged.
(2) The one exception is that the owner is not entitled to deal with the ship in such a way as to impair the security of the mortgagee.
(3) Where the owner makes a contract with a third party for the employment of the ship, of such a kind and made or per- formable in such circumstances, that the security of the mort gagee is not impaired, and the owner is both willing and able to perform such contract, the mortgagee is not entitled, by exercising his rights under the mortgage, whether by taking possession, or selling, or arresting the ship in a mortgage
3 De Mattos v. Gibson (1859), 4 De G. & J. 276 [45 E.R. 108 (Rolls Ct.)]; Collins v. Lamport (1964), 11 L.T. 497 (Ch. D); The Innisfallen (1866), L.R. 1 A. & E. 72; Johnson v. Royal Mail Steam Packet Company (1867), L.R. 3 C. P. 38; Keith v. Burrows (1877), L.R. 2 App. Cas. 636 (H.L.); Cory, Brothers, and Co. v. Stewart (1886), 2 T.L.R. 508 (C.A.); The Blanche (1888), 58 L.T. 592 (P.D. & Adm. Div.); The Fan- chon (1880), 5 P. D. 173; The Celtic King, [1894] P. 175; The Heather Bell, [1901] P. 272 (C.A.); Law Guarantee and Trust Society v. Russian Bank for Foreign Trade, [1905] 1 K. B. 815 (C.A.); The Manor, [1907] P. 339 (C.A.); and The Lord Strath- cona, [1925] P. 143.
action in rem, to interfere with the performance of such con tract.
(4) The mortgagee is, however, entitled to exercise his rights under the mortgage without regard to any such contract made by the owner with a third party for the employment of the ship in two cases:
(a) where the contract is of such a kind, and/or is made or performable in such circumstances, that the security of the mortgage is impaired;
(b) where, whether this is so or not, the owner is unwilling and/or unable to perform the contract.
(5) Where the mortgagee, by exercising his rights under the mortgage, interferes with a contract made by the owner with a third party for the employment of the ship in circumstances where he is not, in accordance with (3) and (4) above, entitled to do so, he commits a tort (or actionable wrong in the nature of a tort) against the third party.
(6) The remedies available to the third party against the mortgagee in respect of such tort or actionable wrong are as follows:
(a) where the mortgagee interferes by taking possession or seeking to sell, an injunction restraining him from doing so;
(b) where the mortgagee interferes by arresting the ship in a mortgage action in rem, an order for the release of the ship from arrest in such action;
(c) further or alternatively to (a) or (b) above, damages.
(7) The question whether a particular contract made by the owner with a third party for the employment of the ship is of such a kind, and/or is made or performable in such circum stances, as to impair the security of the mortgagee, is a ques tion of fact.
(8) It is open to a Court as a matter of law to find as a fact that a particular contract is made or performable in such cir cumstances as to impair the security of the mortgagee, if the evidence shows that the owner is impecunious, that he can only perform the voyage to which the contract relates, if at all, on credit, and that the ship is already subject to pressing liabili ties and charges.
(9) The further question, whether the owner is willing and/or able to perform a particular contract, is also a question of fact.
Brandon J. dismissed the charterers' application, having found on the evidence before him, that the owners had dealt with the ship so as to impair the bank's security; that the owners, because of their overall financial condition, had become disabled from completing the voyage; and in any case, that it
was inappropriate to exercise the court's discretion in their favour in the circumstances of that case.
In concluding that the conduct of the appellant in this case would have been actionable in Canada, if engaged in here, the learned Trial Judge purported to apply the third, fifth and sixth principles summarized in The Myrto, assuming that they represented the law of Canada on the subject.
Counsel for the appellant contends, both in his memorandum of fact and law and in oral argument before us, that the learned Trial Judge erred both in his assumption and in his conclusion. He says that the fifth principle stated in The Myrto stands alone in English and Canadian jurisprudence and is not sup ported by the authorities.
Counsel for the respondents both in his memoran dum of fact and law and in oral argument assumed, as the learned Trial Judge did, that The Myrto stated the common law of Canada on the subject.
Having examined The Myrto and the authorities cited in it, I make the following observations. First, the facts of all those cases, including The Myrto, are different from those of the case before us. Secondly, none of the authorities cited in The Myrto supports the conclusion that there exists in England a special maritime tort of interference with contractual rela- 2 tions which differs in its constituent elements from that which exists under the general law of torts.
In this case, the learned Trial Judge found that the interference with contractual relations consisted of threatened arrest and preparations to effect the arrest. In the law of torts such conduct is best characterized as intimidation.
Clerk & Lindsell on Torts, 16th ed. (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1989), defines the tort of intimi dation in the law of England as follows at page 828:
A commits a tort if he delivers a threat to B that he will com mit an act, or use means, unlawful as against B, as a result of
which B does or refrains from doing some act which he is enti tled to do, thereby causing damage either to himself or to C .... The tort, like the tort of procuring a breach of contract, is one of intention and the plaintiff, whether it be B or C, must be a person whom A intended to injure. [My emphasis.] [Foot- notes omitted.]
The elements of the tort, first given recognition by the House of Lords in Rookes v. Barnard, [1964] A.C. 1129, were explained in Morgan v. Fry, [1968] 2 Q.B. 710 (C.A.), where Lord Denning M.R. stated at page 724:
According to the decision in Rookes v. Barnard the tort of intimidation exists, not only in threats of violence, but also in threats to commit a tort or a breach of contract. The essential ingredients are these: there must be a threat by one person to use unlawful means (such as violence or a tort or a breach of contract) so as to compel another to obey his wishes: and the person so threatened must comply with the demand rather than risk the threat being carried into execution. In such circum stance the person damnified by the compliance can sue for intimidation.
In my opinion, it is clear from the foregoing that the principles noted in The Myrto, could not, by themselves, determine this case under the domestic law of England, since, as I have already indicated, neither The Myrto nor the authorities upon which it relies were concerned with facts such as those that confront us in this case. However, what is critical at this stage of the inquiry is not the state of the law of England, but the state of the law of Canada, since we are required to decide whether the learned Trial Judge was correct in his statement of the law of Canada. It would therefore be instructive to consider the com mon law of Canada on the law of the tort of intimida tion.
The Common Law of Canada on the Tort of Intimida tion
In determining the common law of Canada on the tort of intimidation applicable to this case I am not unmindful of the fact that in admiralty matters this Court must consider only "Canadian maritime law" as defined in section 2 of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7], as amended and explained in ITO International Terminal Operators Ltd. v. Miida Electronics Inc. et al., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 752.
The learned Trial Judge found that the appellant made it impossible for the owner to perform the con tract in a reasonable time and by the route commonly understood to be the intended route, by threatening, and preparing for, the arrest of the Alexandros in Panama. He also found that the appellant's conduct was not justified since the appellant's security had not been impaired by the charterparty or its perform ance and that the owner was neither unwilling nor unable to complete the contract.
As I have already said, the conduct which the learned Trial Judge characterized as the tort of inter ference with contractual relations is, on the facts of this case, in reality, the tort of intimidation. The ele ments of that tort in Canadian law were described by Martland J., for the Court, in Roman Corporation Ltd. et al. v. Hudson's Bay Oil and Gas Co. Ltd. et al., [1973] S.C.R. 820, at pages 829-830 as follows:
The appellants also make a claim in tort for intimidation. In order to succeed under this head, the facts relied upon by the appellants would have to disclose that they had sustained dam age by reason of a threat, made by the respondents, of an unlawful act. [My emphasis.]
In that case, the Court held that a declaration of government policy made in good faith by a Minister of the Crown as part of his duty was not an unlawful act, even if a threat.
Five years later, in Central Canada Potash Co. Ltd. et al. v. Government of Saskatchewan, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 42, the Court again confronted the tort of intimidation. There it was alleged that a letter written by a public servant threatening the cancellation of a mining licence and a mineral lease unless the plain tiff observed production quotas set by provisions in a statute and regulations later declared ultra vires amounted to intimidation and entitled the plaintiff to damages as a result of reduction in production in con formance with the letter.
The Court concluded that the public servant was not liable on the basis that the public servant had not used unlawful means and, in any event, an intent to injure had not been shown.
Martland J. writing for the Court expressed the conclusion at page 90 as follows:
This brings me to the latter portion of the definition of intimi dation from Clerk & Lindsell [the definition quoted earlier in these reasons] which I have adopted. 'The tort is one of inten tion and the plaintiff, whether it be B or C, must be a person whom A intended to injure.' The authority for this statement is found by the authors in the judgments of Lord Devlin and Lord Evershed in the Rookes case, and I am in agreement with it. There is no evidence that the Deputy Minister intended to injure the appellant. The correspondence, and particularly the letter of September 20, 1972, make it clear that his purpose was to induce compliance with an existing legislative scheme.
Martland J. then considered the earlier decision of the Court in Roman Corporation Ltd. et al. v. Hud- son's Bay Oil and Gas Co. Ltd. et al., supra, and expressly reaffirmed it.
The author of Fridman on Torts, London: Waterloo Publishers, 1990 notes that in Canada, the possibility of defending an action for intimidation by pleading justification has been accepted although the likeli hood of it occurring is remote. He expressed the view as follows at pages 552-553:
What has happened in some, Canadian not English, cases is that the court has accepted the argument that the conduct of the defendant was not aimed at the plaintiff, nor designed to cause him injury per se. It was perpetuated, or proposed, for other, legitimate purposes, such as the promotion of Government pol icy, or the effectuation of legislation. It might be argued that this is a form of justification, in that conduct that injures, or might injure a plaintiff, to the knowledge of the defendant, may not be actionable if there is a valid reason why such con duct takes place. If this is correct, the situation with respect to intimidation may be analogous to that which obtains in cases of conspiracy. The main purpose or object of the combination is the test of liability in conspiracy. So, too, the main purpose of the alleged intimidation may be the test of whether the tort has been committed. A similarity would also exist between the tort of intimidation and that of procuring or inducing a breach of contract. In such instances, also, it may be possible for the defendant to justify what he has done, even if prima facie it is actionable. Such an attitude would make the law relating to these three distinct, but interrelated torts consistent. [Footnotes omitted.]
Based upon the analysis in ITO—International Ter minal Operators Ltd v. Miida Electronics Inc. et al., supra, I conclude that the foregoing represent the maritime common law of Canada to be considered and applied in deciding whether the appellant's con duct of which the respondents have complained in this case is actionable in Canada.
That the learned Trial Judge knew of the existence of this body of law is clear from the reference in his reasons to Roman Corporation Ltd. et al. v. Hudson's Bay Oil and Gas Co. Ltd. et al., supra, and from the statement [at page 276] (Appeal Book, page 35):
Normally a threat is lawful or unlawful depending on whether the act threatened would itself be lawful or unlawful.
However, he was deflected from considering this body of law by the agreement of counsel "that The Myrto represents the law of Canada" [at page 277] (Appeal Book, page 36).
Based on his acceptance of that proposition, the learned Trial Judge felt constrained to decide the issue on that basis. He articulated the matter as fol lows [at page 277] (Appeal Book, pages 35-36):
Accepting, as counsel agree, that The Myrto represents the law of Canada and determining, as I must, whether if all the acts had been committed in Canada there would be liability in tort under the principles of The Myrto, I am unable to see why there would not. What The Myrto means is that in such circum stances the mortgagee is not entitled to enforce its security through arrest, at least not without incurring the risk of liability in tort to the charterers or others having contracts with the owner for the employment of the ship.
I am therefore satisfied that, had all the acts complained of occurred in Canada, there would have been liability in tort to the charterers for the increased costs flowing to them as a result of the interference with the normal course of the voyage which interference appears to have commenced, at the latest, on March 6. [Emphasis in original.]
In my respectful view, the learned Trial Judge erred in law in concluding that in Canada the tort of intimidation based on the appellant's conduct fell to
be determined solely on the basis of the principles stated in The Myrto.
Although those principles were of assistance to him in appreciating the limits on the appellant's rights as mortgagee if it chose to exercise its undoubted right to arrest the Alexandros, in my opin ion, they were of no assistance in resolving the dis pute in this case as between the appellant and the respondents.
There was no doubt that the appellant's mortgage was in default in substantial amounts and over an extended period. There was equally no doubt that, by the law of the mortgage, the appellant had a legal right to arrest the Alexandros. Can the communica tion by the appellant of its intention to exercise its undoubted right of arrest and the taking of prepara tory steps to effect such arrest in a jurisdiction that favoured its interest be unlawful such that an action based on those acts be maintainable in Canada? In my respectful view, the law of Canada as I have explained it, mandates a negative response to the question.
It is not disputed that the appellant's right to arrest the Alexandros had crystallized at the time its solici tors indicated that it would exercise those rights. It is equally beyond dispute that in exercising those rights the appellant may be obliged in law to respect the contractual rights of the respondents. The record is bereft of any evidence that the appellant intended to exercise its right of arrest with the intention of injur ing the respondents. In those circumstances, a mere threat by the appellant to exercise those rights with out more would not, by the law of Canada, amount to an actionable wrong. Consequently, I conclude that the learned Trial Judge erred in law in concluding that the conduct of the appellant would have been actionable in Canada, if engaged in here.
But, even if the appellant's conduct could be char acterized as inducing breach of contract, as it was by the learned Trial Judge, the principles laid down in The Myrto do not reflect the common law of Canada in this regard. While conduct which interferes with
performance of a contract, whether directly or indi rectly, may be tortious if done deliberately and with knowledge of the existence of the contract, it will not be so if the conduct which induced the breach was "justified": Greig y Insole, [1978] 3 All E.R. 449 (Ch. D.), at page 491; Posluns v. Toronto Stock Exchange and Gardiner, [1964] 2 O.R. 547 (H. Ct.). Here, the appellant' s right to arrest the Alexandros having crys tallized, there can be no doubt, in my respectful view, that it was justified in informing the respondents of its intention to arrest the ship and in taking the steps necessary to effect such an arrest in Panama.
In view of this conclusion, I do not consider it nec essary to deal with the other issues raised in this appeal.
Conclusion
Since I have decided that the learned Trial Judge was wrong in concluding that the conduct of the appellant constituted a tort actionable in Canada, if engaged in here, it follows that the respondents have not satisfied the first branch of the choice of law test, and that there was no actionable wrong in Canada for which the appellant could be found liable. As a result, the appeal is allowed with costs and the action is dis missed with costs.
HEALD J.A.: I agree. MARCEAU J.A.: I agree.
 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.