T-445-02
2002 FCT 794
Cyber Sea Technologies, Inc. (Plaintiff)
v.
Underwater Harvester Remotely Operated Vehicle, Serial
No. UHROV-101 and Triton Logging Company Inc., aka
Triton Logging Company Ltd. (Defendants)
Indexed as: Cyber Sea Technologies, Inc. v. Underwater
Harvester Remotely Operated Vehicle (T.D.)
Trial Division, Hargrave P.--Vancouver, July 8 and 16,
2002.
Maritime Law
--
Practice
-- Motion to either strike action on ground of lack of
jurisdiction or to secure release of submersible from arrest
without bail -- Action involving submersible device -- Court
only having jurisdiction under Federal Court Act, s. 22 if
submersible "ship" -- Submersible likely within Federal Court
Act, s. 2 definition of ship, using elements set out in The
Queen v. St. John Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. Ltd. et al.
as guide, and assuming navigation meaning planned, orderly or
purposeful movement of vessel -- Motion to strike dismissed
-- Although within Court's discretion to release property
under arrest on appropriate terms, vessel will not be
released from arrest merely because underlying dispute being
arbitrated -- Submersible also securing arbitration award --
Plaintiff entitled to security in amount sufficient to cover
reasonably arguable best case -- Security to full value of
claim for principal amount appropriate, but 50% for interest,
costs too high.
Federal Court Jurisdiction
--
Trial Division
-- Motion to strike action to recover balance of price of
submersible on ground of lack of jurisdiction -- Court only
having jurisdiction under Federal Court Act, s. 22 if
submersible "ship" -- Submersible likely "ship" within
Federal Court Act, s. 2 definition thereof i.e. any vessel or
craft capable of being used for navigation -- "Vessel",
"craft" broad terms -- Only limitation that must be capable
of use, at least in part, for navigation -- Significance of
omission of "including" which appeared in earlier definitions
-- Elements set out in The Queen v. St. John Shipbuilding
& Dry Dock Co. Ltd. et al. used as guide to determining
issue -- Concept of "navigation" examined -- Submersible used
at least in part in navigation -- Motion dismissed.
This was a motion seeking either to strike the action for
want of jurisdiction or the release from arrest without bail
of the submersible. The action seeks to recover the balance
of the price of a submersible device which was designed to be
manoeuvred through a flooded but unlogged reservoir, to cut
off standing timber and then to float each particular tree to
the surface. It manoeuvres by means of propellers, but is
tethered to and manoeuvred from a barge or shore-mounted
control cabin by means of 400 feet of cables and a compressed
air line. The defendant submitted that the Court did not have
jurisdiction over the submersible. The plaintiff submitted
that the Court had jurisdiction under Federal Court
Act, paragraph 22(2)(a) (claims with respect to
title, possession or ownership of a ship), (m) (claims
in respect of goods, material or services supplied to a ship
for operation or maintenance); and (n) (claims arising
out of contract relating to construction of a ship). The
issues were: whether the action plainly and obviously could
not succeed by reason of the absence of a ship over which to
take jurisdiction, or whether the claim lacked merit.
Held, the application should be dismissed.
The submersible is, in all probability, a ship. The
question of jurisdiction depended upon whether the
submersible fell within the Federal Court Act
definition of "ship". Subsection 2(1) defines "ship" as any
vessel or craft designed, used or capable of being used
solely or partly for navigation, without regard to method or
lack of propulsion. By defining a ship in terms of both
vessel or craft, very general and broad words in themselves,
the definition would seem to encompass anything used on or in
the water. The only limitation is that the vessel or craft be
used at least in part in navigation. Omission of the word
"including" which appeared in earlier legislation did not
appreciably change the scope of the definition.
No overall principle applied in order to determine the
issue. Rather, various elements which go into defining a ship
were used as a guide, including those set out in The Queen
v. St. John Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. Ltd. et al.
(1981), 126 D.L.R. (3d) 353 (F.C.A.). That list is neither
exhaustive nor are all of the elements necessarily essential
in determining that an object is a ship. However, the object
must certainly, to come within the definition of a ship, be
something used in part or in whole for navigation. The
concept of navigation includes the planned and orderly or
purposeful movement of a vessel from one place to another,
rather than high speed movement for the sake of acceleration
itself, as in the case of a jet ski. A submersible is used at
least in part in navigation, or must be navigated and in fact
does navigate through the water, under its own power, with
the purpose of locating a standing tree and, after cutting it
off and floating it to the surface using part of its
cargo-expendable equipment (balloons, tethers and bolts or
lag screws), navigates onward to the next tree. It is fitted
with equipment and appurtenances just as is a ship, including
cameras and lights and may or may not have aboard, equipment
or appurtenances necessary for the navigation of the
submersible. The motion to strike for want of jurisdiction
failed.
The plaintiff did not oppose a stay based upon an
arbitration clause in the building contract.
The Court has discretion to release property held on a
warrant of arrest on such terms as it thinks appropriate. But
a vessel will not be released from arrest merely because the
underlying dispute is being arbitrated. Moreover the
jurisdiction of the Court may be invoked primarily to obtain
security for arbitration. The submersible also secures any
arbitration award.
A plaintiff, having arrested a vessel, is entitled to
security in an amount sufficient to cover the reasonably
arguable best case, together with interest and costs, capped
at the value of the wrongdoing vessel. An arguable best case
ought not to be pre-judged at the interlocutory stage for the
court is not then trying the case. Security to the full value
of the claim (US$206,535) was proper for the principal amount
as that is the reasonably arguable best case, but the 50% for
interest and costs was high, particularly as the parties are
bound for arbitration, in which each side must pay its own
costs. Therefore, allowing two years' interest and a moderate
allowance for costs and disbursements, an appropriate amount
for security was US$235,000.
statutes and regulations judicially
considered
Canada Shipping Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. S-9, s. 2
"ship".
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10,
s. 2 "ship".
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, s. 2(1)
"ship" (as am. by S.C. 2001, c. 6, s. 115),
22(1),(2)(a),(j),(k),(m),
(n),(s).
Federal Court Rules, 1998, SOR/98-106, r. 221.
cases judicially considered
applied:
Imperial Oil Ltd. v. Expo Spirit (The) (1986), 6
F.T.R. 156 (F.C.T.D.); The Queen v. St. John Shipbuilding
& Dry Dock Co. Ltd. et al. (1981), 126 D.L.R. (3d)
353; 43 N.R. 15 (F.C.A.); Steedman v. Scofield and
Another, [1991] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 163 (Q.B. (Com. Ct.)).
distinguished:
Dome Petroleum Ltd. v. Hunt International Petroleum
Co., [1978] 1 F.C. 11 (T.D.); Perks v. Clark,
[2001] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 431 (C.A.).
considered:
Warkworth, The (1884), 9 P.D. 145 (C.A.); Lord
(Owners of S.S.) v. Newsum, Sons & Co., [1920] 1 K.B.
846; Hayn v. Culliford (1878), 3 C.P.D. 410; affd
(1879), 4 C.P.D. 182 (C.A.); Good v. London Steam Ship
Owners' Association (1871), 6 L.R.C.P. 563 (C.A.);
United States Shipping Board and Another v. Vigers
Bros. (1924), 20 Ll. L. Rep. 62 (K.B.); Seafarers'
International Union of Canada--CLC-AFL-CIO v. Crosbie
Offshore Services Ltd., [1982] 2 F.C. 855; (1982), 135
D.L.R. (3d) 485; 82 CLLC 14,180 (C.A.); Argosy Seafoods
Ltd. v. Atlantic Bounty (The) (1991), 45 F.T.R. 114
(F.C.T.D.); Pictou Industries Ltd. v. Secunda Marine
Services Ltd. (1994), 78 F.T.R. 78 (F.C.T.D.); North
Saskatchewan Riverboat Co. v. 573475 Alberta Ltd. (1995),
96 F.T.R. 166 (F.C.T.D.); Armada Lines Ltd. v. Chaleur
Fertilizers Ltd., [1995] 1 F.C. 3; (1994), 170 N.R. 372
(C.A.); Atlantic Lines & Navigation Company Inc. v.
The Ship "Didymi", [1985] 1 F.C. 240 (T.D.); Rena K,
The, [1979] 1 Q.B. 377; Moschanthy, The, [1971] 1
Lloyd's Rep. 37 (Adm.).
referred to:
Vanessa Ann, The, [1985] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 549 (Q.B.
(Com. Ct.)); Armada Lines Ltd. v. Chaleur
Fertilizers Ltd., [1997] 2 S.C.R. 617; (1997), 148 D.L.R.
(4th) 217; 213 N.R. 228; Bazias 3, The, [1993] 1
Lloyd's Rep. 101 (C.A.); Atlantic Shipping (London) Ltd.
v. Captain Forever (The) (1995), 97 F.T.R. 32
(F.C.T.D.).
authors cited
Canadian Admiralty Law: Introductory Materials, 7th
ed. Halifax: Dalhousie Univ., 1990.
Meeson, Nigel. Admiralty Jurisdiction and Practice,
2nd ed. London: LLP Professional Pub., 2000.
MOTION to either strike an action to recover the balance
of the price of a submersible device on the ground of lack of
jurisdiction, or to secure the release of the submersible
from arrest without bail. Motions dismissed and bail set at
US$235,000.
appearances:
Peter G. Bernard, Q.C. for plaintiff.
John S. Waldie for defendants.
solicitors of record:
Bernard & Partners, Vancouver, for
plaintiff.
Jones Emery Hargreaves Swan, Victoria, for
defendants.
The following are the reasons for order rendered in
English by
[1]Hargrave P.: In this action the plaintiff, a builder,
seeks to recover the balance of the price of a submersible
device which is designed to be manoeuvred through a flooded
but unlogged reservoir, to cut off standing timber and then
to float each particular tree to the surface, using one of a
number of air bags which it carries aboard. This unmanned
device, which for the present I shall neutrally designate as
the submersible, manoeuvres by means of four propellers,
however it is tethered to and manoeuvred from a barge or
shore-mounted control cabin by means of a 400-foot umbilical
cord consisting of power cables, control cables and a
compressed air line. The operator, who controls the movement
of the submersible from the surface, is guided by closed
circuit video.
[2]The submersible was arrested in this action. The
defendant, apparently as an entity with an ownership
interest, seeks to set aside the arrest by reason of want on
the part of the Court of jurisdiction over the submersible,
or that the proceeding be stayed in favour of arbitration.
However, in the event the Court has jurisdiction, the
corporate defendant asks that the arrest be set aside, or
that the submersible be released without bail, or that bail
be set.
[3]In deciding this motion I have kept in mind that I need
not determine, in absolute terms, whether the submersible is
a ship. Certainly, were I able to make an absolute decision
as to whether or not the submersible is a ship, thus clearly
indicating whether or not this Court has jurisdiction, that
could well be determinative. However, since the question is
in the context striking out for want of jurisdiction under
rule 221 [of the Federal Court Rules, 1998,
SOR/98-106], I need only determine whether, on the one hand,
the action plainly and obviously cannot succeed by reason of
the absence of a ship over which to take jurisdiction or, on
the other hand, whether there is some possibility, even a
slight possibility, that the submersible is a ship, in which
instance the outcome would not be beyond doubt. This concept,
that it must be plain and obvious that the object in question
is not a ship, before the statement of claim ought to be
struck out, is one used by Mr. Justice Dubé in
Imperial Oil Ltd.v. Expo Spirit (The) (1986), 6 F.T.R.
156 (F.C.T.D.), at page 158. In this instance I hesitate to
say, in absolute terms, that the submersible is a ship,
however there is a strong indication to that end. Thus, the
action must proceed, with the caveat that the trial judge,
who may well have further and better evidence together with
fuller argument on the material, is certainly not barred from
finding want of jurisdiction.
CONSIDERATION
Jurisdiction
[4]There are several approaches to jurisdiction. Under the
general head of relief pursuant to Canadian maritime law and
the class of matters within navigation and shipping, as set
out in subsection 22(1) of the Federal Court Act
[R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7], the plaintiff submits there is
jurisdiction. Similarly, the plaintiff submits there is
jurisdiction under several of the specific heads of
subsection 22(2), more specifically the heads of jurisdiction
are paragraphs 22(2)(a), claims with respect to title,
possession or ownership of a ship; (m), claims in
respect of goods, material or services supplied to a ship for
operation or maintenance; and (n), claims arising out
of contract relating to construction of a ship. Central to
any jurisdiction is that the submersible comes within the
Federal Court definition of "ship" [sub-section 2(1) (as am.
by S.C. 2001, c. 6, s. 115)], being:
2. (1) . . .
"ship" means any vessel or craft designed, used or capable
of being used solely or partly for navigation, without regard
to method or lack of propulsion, and includes
(a) a ship in the process of construction
from the time that it is capable of floating,
. . . |
[5]I will elaborate on the necessity that, except for
paragraphs 22(2)(j) and (k) jurisdiction over
aircraft and perhaps paragraph 22(2)(s) dock charges,
there must be a ship involved, as defined in the Federal
Court Act, to come within section 22 of the Act. The
general jurisdiction under subsection 22(1) requires that the
matter come within "navigation and shipping". The term
"shipping" speaks for itself: it requires involvement of a
ship. However, as to navigation, I am unaware of any
exhaustive definition in the case law, a point to which I
will shortly turn. The specific heads of subsection 22(2)
jurisdiction, upon which the plaintiff also relies, are all
clearly dependent upon the involvement of a ship.
[6]Two definitions of navigation, which are quoted from
time to time, appear in Warkworth, The (1884), 9 P.D.
145 (C.A.) and in Lord (Owners of S.S.) v. Newsum, Sons
& Co. [1920] 1 K.B. 846. In The Warkworth,
Lord Justice Fry accepted a dictionary meaning of navigation,
proffered by Dr. Phillimore that "navigation is the science
or art of conducting a ship from place to place through the
water" (page 148).
[7]In the Lord case, at page 849, Mr. Justice
Bailhache, in the context of a charter party, defined
navigation as a reference "to a ship which is in motion, a
ship which is being navigated." However, in Hayn v.
Culliford (1878), 3 C.P.D. 410, upheld (1879), 4 C.P.D.
182 (C.A.), Mr. Justice Denman pointed out [at page 417] that
a ship need not be in a state of motion to be in a state of
navigation, referring to Good v. London Steam Ship Owners'
Association (1871), 6 L.R.C.P. 563 (C.A.):
I do not think that the case assists the decision of that
before me, beyond being an authority for the proposition that
the ship need not be in a state of motion in order to be in a
state of navigation, within the meaning of that word as used
in the deed there in question. Other cases have decided that
the word "navigation" for some purposes includes a period
when the ship is not in motion; as, for instance, when she is
at anchor.
[8]What these cases involving the meaning of navigation,
in various contexts, have in common, is the involvement of a
ship. Thus the crux of jurisdiction, in the present instance,
irrespective of where the claim might fall in section 22 of
the Federal Court Act, depends upon whether or not the
submersible falls within the Federal Court Act
definition of a ship.
[9]A starting point is the scope of the definition of a
ship, from subsection 2(1) of the Federal Court Act,
which I will set out again, in part, for ease of
reference:
2. (1) . . .
"ship" means any vessel or craft designed, used or capable
of being used solely or partly for navigation, without regard
to method or lack of propulsion . . . .
[10]Counsel for the defendant submits that this is a
narrow and all-inclusive definition because in the current
draft of the definition the phrase "includes every
description of", modifying candidates in earlier legislation
for designation as a ship, a "vessel, boat or craft" has been
omitted. A definition is now said to be narrower for the term
"ship" means "any vessel or craft". It is unfortunate that
those drafting Canadian legislation have, over the years,
been unable to agree on a standard definition of a ship. Even
within the Federal Court Act those drafting that
legislation have, from time to time, vacillated between
various in-house definitions and definitions incorporated by
reference.
[11]By defining a ship in terms of both vessel or craft,
very general and broad words in themselves, the definition
would seem to encompass anything used on or in the water.
Indeed, depending upon reasonableness within a given context,
"anything that floats may be called a craft": United
States Shipping Board and Another v. Vigers Bros. (1924),
20 L1. L. Rep. 62 (K.B.), at page 63. The net is thus
exceedingly broadly cast, with the only limitation being that
the vessel or craft be used at least in part in navigation. I
do not see, if one were to make it an inclusive definition,
adding the word "including", that the scope of vessels and
craft, included in the definition of ship, would be broadened
appreciably or at all.
[12]In reaching the conclusion that the omission of the
word "including" does not appreciably change the scope of the
definitions, I am well aware of The Queen v. St. John
Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. Ltd. et al. (1981), 126
D.L.R. (3d) 353 (F.C.A.). In that case, at page 362, the
Court of Appeal pointed out that the then definition of a
ship, in the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd
Supp.), c. 10, s. 2], was an inclusive definition, thus
enlarging the term. However, this brings to mind two
observations. First, as Mr. Justice Urie observed in St.
John Shipbuilding, at page 360, the case law does not
establish any particular principle to apply in determining
whether a given object is or is not a ship. Second, the
definition of a ship, which concerned the Court of Appeal in
St. John Shipbuilding, included "any description of
vessel or boat", presenting a very much narrower choice of
objects which might be designated as a ship, as compared with
a general and broad word "craft" in the present definition.
Third, the then definition of a ship required that it be used
in navigation, not merely, as in the present definition,
"solely or partly for navigation". While the inclusive
definition may, in one past guise or another, have arguably
made a broader range of objects possible ships, I do not see
in law that the present definition has narrowed, appreciably
or at all, and may even have expanded what may be designated
to be a ship.
[13]In reaching the conclusion that the submersible is, in
all probability, a ship, I rejected the idea that there is
any overall particular principle which I might apply in order
to determine the issue, but rather have taken as a guide
various elements which go into defining a ship, including
those set out in page 362 of St. John Shipbuilding. I
say including, because I do not believe that the list set out
there is exhaustive, either for or against determining the
submersible to be a ship. In St. John Shipbuilding the
Court of Appeal considered various relevant facts in order to
determine that a crane barge was a ship:
(a) the barge was built for use on water;
(b) the barge was capable of being moved from place to
place and was in fact so moved from time to time;
(c) the barge was capable of carrying cargo and had done
so;
(d) the barge was capable of carrying people and clearly
had to do so in order to provide a crew to operate the
crane;
(e) that the barge was neither self-propelled nor capable
of navigation herself, did not detract from the possibility
that she was a ship.
The present instance I would add additional factors
being:
(i) the submersible was designed and built for use in the
water;
(ii) the submersible is equipped with its own power in
order to navigate from place to place;
(iii) the submersible is to carry equipment to allow it to
navigate, including sonar, cameras, lights, ballast and
floatation systems;
(iv) the submersible will carry a number of inflatable
balloons and other equipment, analogous to cargo, to allow it
to float cut trees to the surface;
(v) that the submersible is unmanned is not a real factor
in that towed cargo carrying barges are just one example of
unmanned objects which may be ships;
(vi) that the submersible is controlled and navigated from
the surface, so that its movement in navigating through the
water is not dependent upon someone abroad, is a neutral
factor, just as in the case of a towed dumb barge which is,
in effect, navigated by the tug;
(vii) that the submersible which is designed to operate
largely under water, except when brought to the surface to
take on a cargo of more air balloons, tethering lines for the
balloons and bolts to drive into trees, navigates under
water, is not a factor in determining whether or not the
object is a ship and here I have in mind full-scale
submarines which are ships.
[14]As I have said, the list of ship characteristics set
out in St. John Shipbuilding is not exhaustive.
Moreover, the cases referred to in St. John
Shipbuilding indicate that not all of the elements are
necessarily essential in determining that an object is a
ship. However, the object must certainly, to come within the
definition of a ship, be something used in part or in whole
for navigation. I have already dealt with the concept of
navigation, which includes the movement of a vessel from
place to place. I would add that this movement from place to
place must be with some purpose, not just a random movement
and here I would refer to Steedman v. Scofield and
Another, [1992] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 163 (Q.B. (Com. Ct.)), at
page 166, for there Mr. Justice Sheen pointed out that
"[n]avigation' is not synonymous with movement on water", but
rather navigation was the planned and orderly movement, a
purposeful movement, from one place to another, rather than
high speed movement for the sake of acceleration itself, as
in the case of a jet ski.
[15]In the present instance, keeping all of the above
elements in mind as a guide, a submersible is used at least
in part in navigation, or must be navigated and in fact does
navigate through the water, under its own power, with the
purpose of locating a standing tree and, after cutting it off
and floating it to the surface using part of its
cargo-expendable equipment, navigates onward to the next
tree. As I have noted, the submersible carries a cargo of
expendable equipment, being balloons, tethers and bolts or
lag screws by which to attach the balloons to the trees. The
submersible is fitted with equipment and appurtenances just
as is a ship, including cameras and lights and may or may not
have aboard, at present, specified sonar equipment, all being
equipment or appurtenances necessary for the navigation of
the submersible.
[16]In reaching the conclusion that a submersible is in
all likelihood a ship, I have not overlooked Dome
Petroleum Ltd. v. Hunt International Petroleum
Co., [1978] 1 F.C. 11 (T.D.). In Dome Petroleum
the Court dealt with what the parties had called a drilling
ship, that is a ship-mounted oil drilling rig in the context
of the then Canada Shipping Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. S-9,
s. 2] definition of a ship, which required, in order to be a
ship, that it be "used in navigation". The Court found that
any navigation, which consisted of towing the drilling rig
into position, was purely incidental. Of course, these
comments, as pointed out by Mr. Wylie Spicer in his paper in
Canadian Admiralty Law: Introductory Materials, 1990,
Dalhousie University, are purely obiter, for the case
was decided on the basis that the agreement at issue was not
an agreement for the use or hire of a ship, but was
substantially an agreement for drilling a well in the ground,
unrelated to admiralty. Indeed, the obiter comments in
Dome have subsequently been passed by: here I would
refer, by way of an example, both to Mr Spicer's paper and to
Seafarers' International Union of Canada--CLC-AFL-CIO v.
Crosbie Offshore Services Ltd., [1982] 2 F.C. 855, a
decision of the Court of Appeal. There, at page 869, Chief
Justice Thurlow commented upon the nature of drill rigs:
The rigs are also ships. They have means of
self-propulsion but for one reason or another may be towed to
a drill site. When located, the rig can be partly submerged
and operate while resting on the bottom in water not more
than 120 feet deep. In deeper water and in particular in
those here involved the rig is partially submerged but
floats. It is maintained in its position by anchors, which,
as already indicated, are placed in position by the service
vessels.
The Chief Justice did not refer to the Dome case.
Leave to appeal Crosbie Offshore Services to Supreme
Court of Canada was refused.
[17]Certainly I am aware of Perks v. Clark, [2001]
2 Lloyd's Rep. 431 (C.A.). In Perks the Court of
Appeal applied an actual use or a real work test, with the
subject-matter being a jack-up rig, which only incidentally
was towed from one place to another. Moreover, at issue was
whether a rig fell within the definition of a ship for
taxation purposes. In Perks the Court held that a
jack-up drilling rig was not a ship, however, the Court there
limited its findings to the facts, noting that drilling ships
and drilling barges were ships, observed that there were
other forms of drill rigs, including jack-up rigs, which
could not perform their functions unless resting on the
bottom and, as such, even though it seems an unsatisfactory
division of drill rigs between ships and non-ships, jack-up
rigs were not ships because their real work was in drilling
wells.
[18]Neither Dome nor Perks particularly
helps the defendant in arguing that the submersible is not a
ship. Dome Petroleum really involved another issue and
has been passed by in subsequent decisions. Moreover, such an
approach seems to be based on the idea that when a drill rig
is drilling it is not a ship, a point which Mr. Spicer quite
sensibly views as a dangerous and illogical argument. Indeed,
it is an argument which is inconsistent with the concept of a
ship, an object which need only be used, in part, in
navigation. Perks not only was decided in a tax
context, but also recognized that there were marine drilling
rigs which were ships.
[19]Taking all of the circumstances, it is very likely
that a submersible is a ship. Thus, the first branch of the
defendant's motion fails.
Stay
[20]In the event of a finding of jurisdiction the
defendant seeks a stay, based upon an arbitration clause in
the building contract. Quite properly, the plaintiff does not
oppose.
Release Without Security
[21]The defendant seeks, in the event that the action is
not struck out for want of jurisdiction, that the submersible
be released from arrest without bail. The grounds here are
that the claim lacks merit. The defendant refers to much
documentation and affidavit evidence said to demonstrate a
weak or even non-existent claim. As I pointed out to counsel
for the defendant, this is not a hearing or a summary
judgment application. However, I should elaborate on this
point.
[22]In Argosy Seafoods Ltd. v. Atlantic Bounty,
The (1991), 45 F.T.R. 114 (F.C.T.D.), at page 119, Mr.
Justice MacKay observed that "the Court has discretion to
release property held on warrant of arrest and to do so on
such terms as it thinks appropriate". Associate Chief Justice
Jerome, in Pictou Industries Ltd. v. Secunda Marine
Services Ltd. (1994), 78 F.T.R. 78 (F.C.T.D.), at page 80
said that only rarely, in the absence of a consent, would the
court release an arrested vessel without security and that
was so even where the parties were pursuing arbitration.
Admiralty Jurisdiction and Practice, 2nd ed. by Nigel
Meeson, London: LLP Professional Pub., 2000, notes [at page
145] that release from arrest is discretionary and while a
court could release an arrested vessel without security "this
is only done in exceptional circumstances, and only where
some satisfactory alternative to ordinary security is
provided", there referring to Vanessa Ann, The, [1985]
1 Lloyd's Rep. 549 (Q.B. (Com. Ct.)), at page 551 and to
North Saskatchewan Riverboat Co. v. 573475 Alberta
Ltd. (1995), 96 F.T.R. 166 (F.C.T.D.). In the latter case
I denied the release of the Edmonton Queen, without
bail or security, for among other things, "[t]he release of a
vessel without bail or security is an implication that the
arrest was unlawful and the security unnecessary:" (page
170), here relying upon Armada Lines Ltd. v. Chaleur
Fertilizers Ltd., [1995] 1 F.C. 3 (C.A.), at page 18,
reversed on other grounds, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 617. Indeed, the
usual practice is to release the vessel only on the provision
of enough security to cover the claim, interest and costs, on
the basis of the plaintiff's reasonably best arguable case:
Bazias 3, The, [1993] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 101 (C.A.), at
page 105.
[23]Returning to an earlier concept, a vessel will not be
released from arrest merely because the underlying dispute is
being arbitrated. Moreover, the jurisdiction of the court may
be invoked primarily to obtain security for arbitration. This
concept is fully canvassed in Atlantic Lines &
Navigation Company Inc. v. The Ship "Didymi", [1985] 1
F.C. 240 (T.D.), a decision of Madam Justice Reid. There she
distinguishes the various cases which may appear to be to the
contrary and applies Rena K, The, [1979] 1 Q.B. 377,
in which security was ordered to stand even though
arbitration was in progress at the time of the arrest. In
this instance, the submersible presently also secures any
arbitration award. This leads to the amount of security.
Amount of Security
[24]It is a well-established principle that "a plaintiff,
having arrested a vessel, is entitled to security in an
amount sufficient to cover the reasonably arguable best case,
together with interest and costs, capped at the value of the
wrongdoing vessel": see Atlantic Shipping (London) Ltd. v.
Captain Forever (The) (1995), 97 F.T.R. 32 (F.C.T.D.), at
page 34. An arguable best case ought not to be prejudged at
the interlocutory stage for the court then is not trying the
case. Here I would refer to The Captain Forever and to
the underlying authority, Moschanthy, The, [1971] 1
Lloyd's Rep. 37 (Adm.), the decision of Mr. Justice Brandon
who formed the view that the plaintiff had [at page 45] "an
arguable case in fact and law which cannot, and ought not, to
be prejudged against him at this stage", the reference to a
stage in time being on interlocutory motion to have security
reduced. Mr. Justice Brandon went on to observe that there
was always a remedy for damages for wrongful arrest or for
wrongful demand for excess security (page 46).
[25]In this instance security is sought to the full value
of the claim, US$206,535, together with 50% for interest and
costs. The principal amount is proper, for that is the
reasonably arguable best case. However the suggested
allowance for interest and costs is high, particularly in
that the parties are bound for arbitration, in which each
side must pay its own costs. Therefore, allowing two years'
interest and a moderate allowance for costs and disbursement
in this proceeding, an appropriate amount for security is
US$235,000.
[26]I thank counsel for the effort they have put into
material and submissions.