Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-1517-84
The ship Cielo Bianco, her owners D'Amico Societa di Navigazione, S.A. (Appellants) (Defendants and counter-claimants)
v.
Algoma Central Railway (Respondent) (Plaintiff)
INDEXED AS: ALGOMA CENTRAL RAILWAY v. CIELO BIANCO
(THE)
Court of Appeal, Thurlow C.J., Pratte and Mac- Guigan JJ.—Toronto, November 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, December 3, 4, 1986; Ottawa, February 26, 1987.
Maritime law Torts Appeal from decision appellants' ship Cielo Bianco entirely at fault in collision Failure by Cielo Bianco to maintain proper look-out leading her to turn to port directly in path of respondent's ship Algobay without signalling or establishing radio contact Collision Regula tions not allowing master to rely on assumption approaching vessel will act in accordance with good seamanship and Regu
lations Regulations requiring all available means appropri ate to prevailing circumstances be taken to ascertain risk of collision In case of doubt risk deemed to exist Algobay proceeding on basis of scanty information Improper use of radar Algobay should have acted earlier to prevent risk of collision Liability established at 75% re Cielo Bianco and 25% re Algobay Appeal allowed Collision Regulations,
C.R.C., c. 1416, RR. 4, 5, 7, 8, 14, 34(a) Ships' Deck Watch Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1481.
Practice Interest Maritime collision Appellants'
liability reduced to 75% Entitled to recover damages on counterclaim Rate of pre-judgment interest from trial
judgment to appeal Principle court of appeal will interfere with trial judgment if latter based on forecast not borne out by subsequent events, broad enough to apply to post-judgment interest Post-judgment interest rate of 14% reduced to
10.50% Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 52(b)(î).
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division in an action arising from a maritime collision which occurred in Sept-Î1es Bay in the Province of Quebec. In the collision, the respondent's ship, the Algobay, struck the tug Pointe-Mar- guerite crushing her against the appellants' ship, the Cielo Bianco, to which she was made fast. The Trial Judge found that the Cielo Bianco, without giving a signal or establishing
radio contact, had turned to port directly into the path of the Algobay. She had failed to maintain a proper look-out. The Cielo Bianco was held entirely at fault and the rate of pre-judg ment and post-judgment interest was set at 14%. The Trial Judge concluded that the Algobay's master, having clearly seen the Cielo Bianco, was entitled to assume that his own ship had been observed by the Cielo Bianco.
At issue are the appellants' submissions that the Algobay failed to give a security call, did not give a whistle signal when altering her course from 135° to 145° in order to avoid a close-quarters situation, and did not comply with the Ships' Deck Watch Regulations. The appeal also raises the issue of pre- and post-judgment rates of interest.
Held, the appeal should be allowed.
The master of the Algobay was under no legal requirement to give a security call to notify inbound traffic that she would be proceeding out of the bay. Furthermore, the balance of probabilities did not indicate that such a call would have been heard.
The submission that the Algobay was at fault in failing to give a whistle signal when altering her course is predicated on the applicability of Rules 14 and 34(a) of the Collision Regu lations. The situations referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) of Rule 14 were present: the circumstances indicated a head-on situation in which the vessels should pass port-to-port (Rule 14(a)), and the alteration to the Algobay's course was made when the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco closed to the point where they were nearly in line (Rule 14(b)). The facts required for the application of Rule 34(a) were present. But while the failure to signal the course alteration constituted a breach of the Rule, such failure was not a cause of the collision as it was probable that the whistle would not have been heard by the Cielo Bianco.
The Algobay did not have on duty a deck watch that complied with the Ships' Deck Watch Regulations. There was no person in charge of the deck watch. The first mate, stationed as he had been by the master in the anchor windlass compart ment, was not in fact in charge of the watch. More importantly, no member of the watch was in a position to carry out the duties imposed by Rules 5 and 7 of the Collision Regulations to keep a proper look-out and to determine if a risk of collision existed. Despite this, the evidence did not establish that the presence of a look-out in addition to the master himself would have enabled the master to be informed earlier than he himself had detected that the Cielo Bianco's masthead lights were closing. Such a failure cannot be regarded as a cause of collision.
The Trial Judge properly found that the actions taken by the master of the Algobay from the time he realized that a dangerous situation had arisen were correct. But that did not answer the question whether the master should have realized earlier that there was a risk of collision. The Trial Judge was wrong in concluding that the master of the Algobay was
entitled to assume that the Cielo Bianco would allow it to pass. The Collision Regulations do not allow a master to rely on the assumption that those in charge of an approaching vessel will act in accordance with good seamanship and the Regulations. Under section 4 of the Regulations, the person in charge of the vessel shall ensure that the vessel complies with the Rules set out in Schedule 1 thereof entitled International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea, 1972. The Rules, which came into effect in July 1977, established a new code, particularly in relation to when a risk of collision is deemed to exist. The Rules require not only that a look-out be kept but also that "all available means appropriate to the prevailing circumstances and conditions" be taken to determine if a risk of collision exists. For this purpose, proper use is to be made of radar equipment and assumptions are not to be made on the basis of scanty information. If there is any doubt, the risk is deemed to exist and the ship must act accordingly.
Given those principles, the Algobay could not be absolved of fault in causing the collision. In the critical period—while she was on her 135° course from the time when the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco were seen to be closing—her look-out was not up to the standard of Rule 5 since all available means were not being used to make a full appraisal of the risk of collision. The radar was not being constantly used to ascertain the Cielo Bianco's course and speed. The radio-telephone was not used, contrary to Rule 7(a), to ascertain the intentions of the Cielo Bianco and whether there was a risk of collision. The Algobay proceeded on assumptions based on scanty information. She disregarded Rule 7(d)(ii) which provides that where a large ship is involved, risk of collision may exist despite an appre ciable bearing change. The Algobay should have acted much earlier to contact the Cielo Bianco by radio-telephone and, failing contact slacken her speed pursuant to Rule 8(e). Liabili ty should be apportioned 75% to the Cielo Bianco and 25% to the Algobay.
The Trial Judge did not err in fixing the pre-judgment rate of interest, as agreed by the parties at 14% from the date the expenses were incurred. The rate of pre-judgment interest to which the appellants were entitled as a result of the present judgment, calculated from the date of the trial judgment to the date of the appeal decision, should be set at 10.50%.
The principle that a court of appeal will interfere with a trial judgment based to some extent on a forecast not borne out by subsequent events was broad enough to apply to a rate of post-judgment interest based, to some extent, on a forecast which by the time the appeal is heard, turns out to have been
wrong. The rate of post-judgment interest, fixed by the Trial Judge at 14%, should accordingly be reduced to 10.50%.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
CONSIDERED:
Stein et al. v. "Kathy K" et al. (The Ship), [1976] 2 S.C.R. 802; The Uskmoor (1902), 9 Asp. M.L.C. (N.S.) 316 (Adm.); The Anselm (1907), 10 Asp. M.L.C. (N.S.) 438 (C.A.); The Hero, [1911] P. 128 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Schreiber Brothers Ltd. v. Currie Products Ltd. et al., [1980] 2 S.C.R. 78; Lewis v. Todd and McClure, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 694; Jaegli Enterprises Ltd. et al. v. Taylor et al., [1981] 2 S.C.R. 2; Bank of England v. Vagliano Brothers, [1891] A.C. 107 (H.L.); Davie Shipbuilding Limited v. The Queen, [1984] 1 F.C. 461 (C.A.); Mercer et al. v. Sijan et al. (1977), 14 O.R. (2d) 12 (C.A.); McCann v. Sheppard, [1973] 2 All ER 881 (C.A.); Curwen v. James, [1963] 2 All E.R. 619 (C.A.); Murphy v. Stone Wallwork (Charlton) Ltd., [1969] 2 All E.R. 949 (H.L.); Attorney-General v. Birmingham, Tame and Rea District Drainage Board, [1912] A.C. 788 (H.L.).
COUNSEL:
Jean Brisset, Q.C. and David Colford for appellants (defendants and counter-claim ants).
George Strathy and Kristine Connidis for respondent (plaintiff).
SOLICITORS:
Brisset, Bishop, Davidson & Davis, Montréal, for appellants (defendants and counter-claim ants).
Campbell, Godfrey & Lewtas, Toronto, for respondent (plaintiff).
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
THURLOW C.J.: This appeal is from a judgment of the Trial Division [T-5213-78, T-1283-81, Addy J., judgment dated November 22, 1984, not reported] in an action arising from a collision which occurred in Sept-Îles Bay at about 05.42 hours on November 14, 1978. In the collision, the stem and port bow of the respondent's ship Algobay struck the starboard side of the tug Pointe Marguerite crushing her against the star board side of the appellant ship Cielo Bianco to which she was made fast. Shortly after the impact the Pointe Marguerite's lines parted and she sank.
Two members of her crew lost their lives. Both the Algobay and the Cielo Bianco sustained damage, the Algobay to her bow and the Cielo Bianco to her starboard side at the point where the Pointe Marguerite had been made fast some 100 to 150 feet from the bow.
At the request of the parties it was directed by the learned Trial Judge that issues as to the quan tum of damages be the subject of a reference after trial, should such a reference be necessary, and the issues dealt with in his decision were those of liability for the collision, the rate of pre-judgment interest to be included in the damages, and the rate of interest which the judgment would bear until paid. In the result the learned Trial Judge held the Cielo Bianco entirely to blame for the collision and fixed the rate of both pre-judgment and post-judgment interest at 14%. All three of these conclusions are at issue in the appeal.
Sept-Îles Bay is a body of water on the north side of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. It is nearly six miles wide from east to west and some four miles from north to south. It is navigable for deep draft ships for some five miles from east to west and some 2 1 / 2 miles from north to south. Its entrance is by Chenal du Milieu which is nearly two miles wide between Pointe à la Marmite on the west and Î1e Grande Basque on the east. The channel is navigable for deep draft ships to within .3 miles of Pointe à la Marmite. At Pointe Noire, some two miles west of Pointe à la Marmite on the southern shore of the bay, is the loading dock of Wabush Mines. Four cables to the northwest of Pointe à la Marmite is a buoy known as D15. Ships entering the bay and bound for the Wabush Mines dock proceed to the north of that buoy. A substantial alteration to port, in the order of 75°, from a ship's course in approaching in mid-channel and entering the bay is required to round the buoy and head for the dock.
On the eastern side of the bay and some 2 3 / 4 miles northeastward of Pointe à la Marmite are the loading docks of Iron Ore Company of Canada. Further north along the eastern shore is the town of Sept-Îles.
The port facilities of both Iron Ore Company of Canada and Wabush Mines operate on a twenty- four-hour basis and ships are generally docked at the facilities by day or by night. Ships come in.and out of the bay at all hours of the day or night. Pilots and tugs are used to assist them in docking and unlocking.
On the night in question there was a ship, the Eastern Hazel, at anchor approximately half a mile northwest of the buoy D15, another ship, the Sir James Dunn, at anchor some two miles to the northwest of the buoy and yet another, the Mont- calm, two miles to the northeast of the buoy. The Frankcliffe Hall had also been at anchor in the northeastern part of the bay but at about 04.20 had begun moving eastwardly to an Iron Ore Company dock and had been docked there by 05.20. The weather was fine and though it was a dark night visibility was unlimited. There was a southeast wind of some. 15 knots. The tide was falling but had little or no effect on the movement or control of the ships.
The collision occurred when the Cielo Bianco which had reached the entrance to the bay and was inbound on her way to the Wabush dock, having taken on a pilot, swung to port, across the course of the Algobay which was on her way out of the bay from a point some two to three miles northwestward of Pointe à la Marmite.
Both ships are large bulk carriers. The Algobay was a new ship on her first voyage to Sept-Iles. She is 730 feet long and 76 feet wide. Her gross tonnage is 22,466.25. Her engines are controlled directly from the bridge. She had arrived in Sept- Îles Bay on November 11, had taken on a cargo of 35,739 tons of iron pellets and then anchored in the western portion of the bay southeastward of the position of the Sir James Dunn to await the completion of repairs to one of her engines. She remained there until 04.20 on November 14 when,
at the request of the technician making the repairs, she began manoeuvering in the bay to test her engines. The manoeuvers consisted of moving to the east of her anchor position for 1.65 miles, turning to starboard 180° and going west for much the same distance, thence northwestward to round the stern of the Sir James Dunn and thence east- wardly again. These manoeuvers were made at various engine speeds both forward and reverse. At some point before rounding the stern of the Sir James Dunn the engineer asked for a test run of half an hour or more at "full speed ahead", a manoeuver which the captain considered would require the vessel to proceed out of the bay to the open waters of the gulf. After rounding the stern of the Sir James Dunn the Algobay's engines were put on "half speed ahead" and her course was altered to starboard to 135° which was calculated to take the ship through Chenal du Milieu at a distance of .7 miles east of Pointe à la Marmite. Half speed for the Algobay when fully loaded was some eight and a half knots. The learned Trial Judge found that in the period that ensued the Algobay had reached a speed of "between seven to eight knots".
Shortly before 05.30 and either shortly before or when making the alteration to starboard, the master of the Algobay, Captain Carlsen, first saw the Cielo Bianco, either by radar or visually, at 40° on his starboard bow and at a distance of 2.8 to 2.9 miles. He had previously heard on his radio several calls by the Cielo Bianco to the pilot station and it appears that at or after the time when he first saw her he also saw the lights of a tug proceeding toward her from the northeast. He had on a previous occasion seen the Cielo Bianco in Sept-Îles Bay and knew she was a large salt water ship.
The position of the Cielo Bianco when first seen by Captain Carlsen was placed by him at some-
where between Pointe à la Marmite and Île Grande Basque at the upper end of Chenal du Milieu. The learned Trial Judge found the position to have been at or to the east of the centre line of the channel. In reaching his conclusion on this and a number of other points he preferred the evidence of the master of the Algobay to that of the master and pilot of the Cielo Bianco. What Captain Carlsen saw were the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco which were open with the bow light to the left, as he saw them, indicating that her course was diverging from his 135° course. With the Cielo Bianco's course at 338° or thereabouts (Captain Carlsen estimated it at 3371°) when she was taking on her pilot, the divergence would be in the order of 28°. At that stage, with her engines shut off, the Cielo Bianco was proceeding at about two knots. As he proceeded on his 135° course, the master of the Algobay noticed the masthead lights beginning to close though the bearing of the Cielo Bianco on his port side was increasing. When the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco were nearly in line, in order to avoid what he referred to as a close-quarters situation he ordered an alteration to starboard to 145° which was calculated to have the ship pass Pointe à la Marmite at a distance of .5 miles. The master estimated that the distance between the ships at that time could have been a mile or so. He could not say for sure. This would indicate that the ship had proceeded for about a mile on its 135° course which, at say seven knots, would have taken about eight and a half minutes; longer if she was not going that fast. When the Algobay had steadied on the 145° course her master noticed that the lights of the Cielo Bianco were still closing and at the point where they came in line or were about to come in line he drew back the throttle to slow the ship's engines and called the Cielo Bianco on his radio-telephone on channel 16 and then on channel 12 but received no reply. He then altered hard-a-starboard, put the engines at "full speed ahead" for some seconds to make the ship swing, blew the danger signal and then reversed to "full astern" with the rudder amidships. He also made a further attempt to call the Cielo Bianco on the pilots' channel (18A) but received no reply. The whistle had not been blown to indicate the alteration from 135° to 145° but a single blast had been blown somewhat later and shortly before the danger signal was sounded. The purpose of the single blast was not to indicate a
turn to starboard but to attract the attention of the first mate who was on watch at the anchor wind lass under the forecastle. None of the Algobay's whistle blasts were heard by those on the Cielo Bianco. In a final attempt to avoid collision, the master of the Algobay sought to release the bow anchors by a remote control in the bridge. It failed. The learned Trial Judge, on the advice of his assessors, concluded that in the circumstances the lowering of the anchors would have had no effect whatever on either the angle of impact or the speed of the ship at the moment of impact. He also concluded that at the time when the lights of the Cielo Bianco began to close and up to the time when her lights began to open to show her star board side, the master of the Algobay was still entitled to assume that the Cielo Bianco would allow the Algobay to pass and turn to port around her stern and that when he began to feel too crowded he did the correct thing by reducing speed and attempting to contact the Cielo Bianco by radio to determine what was happening and what its intention was.
The Cielo Bianco is 835 feet long and 129 feet wide. Her registered tonnage is 51,579. She was carrying 28,000 tons of ballast and some 1,700 tons of bunker fuel. As found by the learned Trial Judge, she had reached a point at the entrance to the bay at or east of the middle line of Chenal du Milieu when at 05.27 her pilot came on board. At that time the engines were stopped but the ship was still moving forward at about two knots. The pilot, Captain Lapierre, having reached the bridge at 05.30, gave an order for "port easy" and shortly
afterwards "port 10°" and "half speed ahead". His purpose was to cause the ship to swing to port and northward of buoy D15 so as to bring her from her course of 338° on entering the bay to a course of 261° to take her to Pointe Noire. In manoeuvering mode "half speed ahead" for her was six to seven knots. The Trial Judge found that by the time she reversed, just shortly before the collision, the ship's speed had reached six to seven knots. In the interval of about four minutes from 05.27 until the order for half speed was given she would have moved and thus closed about 800 feet of the distance between her and the Algobay. In the same four minutes the Algobay at her speed of about six knots would have covered and closed about 2,400 feet, or, since her speed was increas ing, somewhat more.
After putting the pilot aboard at or near the bridge, which is at the aft end of the ship, the Pointe Marguerite proceeded along the starboard side of the Cielo Bianco and was made fast there some 100 to 150 feet from the bow. Another tug, the Pointe -aux -Basques, proceeded around the stern of the Cielo Bianco intending to make fast to her starboard side just forward of the bridge but had not succeeded in doing so when it became apparent that a collision was about to occur and her lines were cast off so that she could get out of the way.
No one concerned with the navigation of the Cielo Bianco saw or perceived the approach of the Algobay until the master who was outside the wheel house and on the starboard side saw a reflection in the glass of the wheel-house door and on turning around saw the lights of the Algobay which was then some 500 to 600 metres away bearing about 20° abaft where he was standing. By that time the Cielo Bianco was said to have been on her course of 261° for about a minute. The master took action immediately, ordered "hard-a-port" and emergency "full astern" and blew two short blasts and then three short blasts on the whistle. It was, however, too late to avoid
the collision which occurred about two minutes later.
The learned Trial Judge, after a careful and detailed consideration of the evidence, concluded that:
From the time the pilot boarded her, the actions of the Cielo Bianco can be directly attributed to the fact that a proper look-out was not maintained and that those responsible for its navigation were totally unaware of the presence of the Algobay.
Later he said:
The failure to keep a proper look-out certainly constituted negligence on the part of the pilot and the captain who were the only two people actively engaged in controlling navigation. This led to their causing the Cielo Bianco to turn to port directly in the path of the Algobay without giving any signal, much less establishing previous contact by radio and agreement on the manoeuvre. This action was a direct effective cause of the accident and constituted also of itself a serious breach of good seamanship. Liability necessarily . flows from these acts and omissions.
That the Cielo Bianco was to blame for not keeping a proper look-out was conceded to the extent that it consisted in not keeping an adequate radar watch for the presence of other ships. When proceeding in Chenal du Milieu the radar had been put on two-mile range and thus when the ship reached the entrance to the bay and was in the process of taking on the pilot the radar would not have disclosed the presence of the Algobay, then some two and a half to three miles away. Even so, her presence was not detected even when she came within the two-mile range.
But there was failure to keep a proper look-out in other respects as well. The master and the pilot appear to have been preoccupied with navigating safely around buoy D15 and neither of them saw the Algobay or her lights until, as previously men tioned, the master finally saw them when the ship was some 500-600 metres away. Nor does it appear that anyone else whose duty it was to keep a look-out for other ships detected or reported the presence of the Algobay.
Of course, if the Algobay's lights were not burn ing as she approached there might be an explana tion for the failure of those navigating the Cielo Bianco to see them. At the trial there was a serious issue as to whether the masthead lights of the Algobay were lit as she approached. There was also an issue with respect to the positioning of her red and green lights. These lights were mounted some 18 feet inboard from the sides and some time after the collision they were moved to locations nearer to or on the sides of the ship. The learned Trial Judge held that at the time of the collision they were properly positioned to comply with the Regulations and I can see no reason to conclude either that he was wrong or that the position of the red light, even if not entirely complying with the Regulations in respect of its visibility from abaft the beam, had any effect as a cause of the collision since it must have been continuously visible from the Cielo Bianco from the time the ships were still nearly three miles apart until the collision occurred.
On the other issue the appellants led evidence of a pilot who testified that when proceeding in a tug toward the Frankcliffe Hall to pilot her to her dock he had seen the bow wave of the Algobay and the ship itself when she was manoeuvering in the northern part of the bay, that he saw her port light but did not see her masthead lights. This witness, who had not been called to give evidence at the inquiry or at the inquest into the deaths of the crewmen of the Pointe Marguerite, testified that he did not realize at the time that he had not seen the Algobay's masthead lights but that later in the night following the collision when thinking about what had happened it occurred to him that he had not seen them. There was, however, evidence that the lights had been switched on when the Algobay began her manceuvers and there was further evi dence by the master of the Frankcliffe Hall that he saw them burning when the Algobay was moving not far from his ship. This was at or about the time she was making her turn to starboard from her first easterly course to go westwardly again. The appellants also called the second mate of the Cielo Bianco who testified that he was on
the boat deck supervising the seamen who had been engaged in heaving in the cable of the tug Pointe -aux -Basques to make her fast to the star- boârd side of the Cielo Bianco just forward of the bridge when he saw the red light of what turned out to be the Algobay, that immediately after wards he saw a white light being switched on followed by another white light a bit lower than the first one being switched on. He estimated the distance away of the Algobay at that time at about four cables, i.e., some 2,400 feet. This witness as well had not previously given evidence.
The learned Trial Judge, in terms that did not hide his displeasure, spurned the evidence of both the appellants' witnesses as manufactured for the purposes of the trial and manifestly false. Having seen and heard them, he was clearly in a far better position than an appellate court to judge as to their credibility and, whether or not they deserved the castigation they received (and I do not suggest either that they did or did not deserve it), in my view it is apparent that his finding that the Algobay's masthead lights were at all material times burning is well supported by the evidence and is unassailable.
So too are his findings as to the gravity of the failure of the Cielo Bianco to keep a proper look out and that this failure was in turn the cause of her having made her disastrous swing to port to go around D15 at a time when the lights of the Algobay were visible, a turn which both the master and the pilot testified théy would not have made had they known of the approach of the Algobay.
I turn now to the conclusion of the learned Trial Judge that the Algobay was not at fault.
The learned Judge found that in the circum stances since the master of the Algobay had clear-
ly seen the Cielo Bianco for nearly three miles he was:
... fully entitled to assume that his own ship also had been observed throughout by the Cielo Bianco. He was also entitled to assume that those in charge were aware not only of its presence but of its course and speed and that they would act prudently and lawfully in accordance with the regulations. To afford any weight to the argument of counsel for the defend ants to the effect that had the Algobay maintained its original course of 135 degrees, there would have been no collision and that therefore its captain should have maintained that course, one must completely ignore what appeared to be taking place before his eyes when the Cielo Bianco's lights which were well opened originally began to close. As found previously, the alteration to 145 degrees was merely to avoid a close passing situation and not to avoid a collision on a crossing situation. When the fact that the Cielo Bianco was really turning to port was realized, an eminent [sic] and emergency collision situation had arisen. To realize before that stage that the Cielo Bianco intended to turn in front of him would have required more than a proper appreciation of the principles of seamanship and navigation, but would have called for something akin to clairvoyance.
The emergency which was a sudden and very serious one was created solely and entirely by the negligence and the poor seamanship of those in control of the Cielo Bianco. Therefore, the actions of the captain of the Algobay from that time must not be weighed after the fact on a fine scale of possibilities but must be considered in the context of the emergency. He immediately adopted what he judged to be emergency measures required to avoid a collision or to lessen its effect. The actions obviously must have served to reduce the angle of impact and in fact coincided with the emergency measures adopted by the Cielo Bianco. I can find no serious lack of skill or breach of any of the principles of seamanship and navigation in any of the measures adopted by the Algobay.
In his memorandum of argument and in the course of argument as well, counsel for the appel lants raised and discussed a total of ten submis sions of errors on the part of the learned Trial Judge in reaching his conclusion on the issue as to fault. In summary, they were that:
1. The Trial Judge took distorted views of the evidence, ignored admissions made by the respondent in its preliminary act and by the master of the Algobay and relied on a statement in the preliminary act of the Cielo Bianco which was manifestly a clerical error.
2. The Trial Judge failed to analyse critically the evidence of the master of the Algobay as to
the course of his vessel when he sighted the Cielo Bianco and should have found that the position of the Cielo Bianco at that time was somewhat to the west of what the Trial Judge referred to as being mid-channel.
3. The Trial Judge failed to appreciate that the master of the Algobay should have realized much earlier than he did that the Cielo Bianco was proceeding towards Pointe Noire, that he attached no importance to the fact it was the Algobay which struck the Cielo Bianco and that the collision occurred west of Pointe à la Mar- mite and of buoy D15, that a large alteration to starboard was required to bring the Algobay from her course of 135° to the point of collision and that if the Algobay had been kept on her course of 135° there would have been no collision.
4. The Trial Judge failed to find the Algobay was in breach of the Ships' Deck Watch Regu lations [C.R.C., c. 1481] and such breach was the effective cause of the collision.
5. The Trial Judge failed to find the Algobay at fault for the collision when she failed to give a security call to notify inbound traffic that she would be proceeding out of the bay.
6. The Trial Judge should have found the Algobay at fault for the collision in failing to give a whistle signal of her alteration of course to starboard from 135° to 145°.
7. The Trial Judge showed a complete lack of knowledge of human nature in disbelieving the appellants' two witnesses as to the lights of the Algobay and failed to comprehend that they had nothing to gain in giving such evidence.
8. The critical comments made by the Trial Judge in his analysis of the evidence of the appellants' witnesses as to the angle of collision were unwarranted.
9. The Trial Judge disregarded evidence show ing that the red and green side lights of the Algobay were not positioned so as to comply
with the Collision Regulations [C.R.C., c. 1416].
10. The Trial Judge erred in not completely disregarding the evidence of the master of the Frankcliffe Hall because such evidence was contradictory and illogical as well as contrary to evidence of the master of the Algobay and because the original log of the Frankcliffe Hall was not produced as the Court had ordered.
With the exception of items 4, 5 and 6, these submissions, in my opinion, all raise questions either of the credibility of witnesses or the weight of evidence and of fact. The Trial Judge's findings on them are made in large part on conflicting testimony, and are of the sort which it is for the Trial Judge to decide after hearing the witnesses and observing their demeanor in giving their evi dence. Only in exceptional instances, as where there is palpable or overriding error in the judg ment of the trial judge, is it open to a court of appeal to reconsider and substitute its own view. In Stein et al. v. 'Kathy K" et al. (The Ship) I Ritchie J., speaking for the Supreme Court after a review of earlier authorities, wrote:
These authorities are not to be taken as meaning that the findings of fact made at trial are immutable, but rather that they are not to be reversed unless it can be established that the learned trial judge made some palpable and overriding error which affected his assessment of the facts. While the Court of Appeal is seized with the duty of re-examining the evidence in order to be satisfied that no such error occurred, it is not, in my view, a part of its function to substitute its assessent of the balance of probability for the findings of the judge who presid ed at the trial.
See also Schreiber Brothers Ltd. v. Currie Prod ucts Ltd. et al.; 2 Lewis v. Todd and McClure; 3 and Jaegli Enterprises Ltd. et al. v. Taylor et al. 4
[ 1976] 2 S.C.R. 802, at p. 808.
2 [1980] 2 S.C.R. 78.
' [1980] 2 S.C.R. 694.
4 [1981] 2 S.C.R. 2.
Having regard to these authorities, I am of the opinion not only that there is no merit in any of the appellants' submissions numbered 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10 but that the points so raised are not fairly arguable as a basis or bases for interfering with the conclusions of the learned Trial Judge and that they do not warrant detailed discussion. The points raised in the submissions numbered 7 and 9 are also unsustainable for the reasons already given with respect to them. That leaves for consideration the submissions numbered 4, 5 and 6.
The point numbered 5 is I think unsustainable as well. Assuming that it would have been a prudent thing for the master of the Algobay to give a security call to notify inbound traffic that she would be proceeding out of the bay, there was no legal requirement that he should do so and having regard to the fact that no one seems to have heard his earlier security call and to the failure of the Cielo Bianco and the pilot to hear his subse quent radio calls the balance of probabilities does not indicate that such a call would have been heard.
The sixth submission is predicated on the appli cability in the circumstances of Rules 14 and 34(a) [of the International Regulations for Pre venting Collisions at Sea, 1972, Schedule I] of the Collision Regulations. 5 They provide:
RULE 14
Head-on Situation
(a) When two power-driven vessels are meeting on reciprocal or nearly reciprocal courses so as to involve risk of collision each shall alter her course to starboard so that each shall pass on the port side of the other.
(b) Such a situation shall be deemed to exist when a vessel sees the other ahead or nearly ahead and by night she could see the masthead lights of the other in a line or nearly in a line and/or both sidelights and by day she observes the corresponding aspect of the other vessel.
(c) When a vessel is in any doubt as to whether such a situation exists she shall assume that it does exist and act accordingly.
Collision Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1416.
RULE 34
Manoeuvring and Warning Signals
(a) When vessels are in sight of one another, a power-driven vessel underway, when manoeuvring as authorized or required by these Rules, shall indicate that manoeuvre by the following signals on her whistle:
—one short blast to mean "I am altering my course to starboard",
—two short blasts to mean "I am altering my course to port",
—three short blasts to mean "I am operating astern propulsion".
By its terms, Rule 34(a) applies when power- driven vessels are underway and when manoeuver- ing "as authorized or required by" the Rules. In The Uskmoor, 6 Sir Francis Jeune P. said of what he referred to as the "whistling rule" [at page 3171:
It is not easy to construe it so as to deal with all possible cases. The words of the rule are not at all easy to make out. Its application is limited in two ways. Vessels must be in sight of one another, and must be "taking any course authorised or required by these rules." It is not easy to put a clear interpreta tion upon the second limitation, although the first one is intelligible enough. The rule does not apply where a vessel in conducting manoeuvres in the ordinary course of navigation, quite apart from seeing any other vessel, thinks it right to port or starboard her helm. But the rule is also limited to "taking any course authorised or required by these rules." It has been sought to put a rather narrow interpretation upon the rule. Of course the word "required" is clear enough. There are certain things required by the rules to be done. But the word "autho- rised" is very much larger, and I am inclined to think that a large interpretation ought to be given to it; that everything is authorised which by the rules of good seamanship it is neces sary and proper should be done, although it is quite true there are certain cases where you may say a more distinct authorisa tion arises. For instance, an overtaking vessel, which has to keep out of the way of the overtaken vessel, would be autho rised in going to port or starboard, according as the circum stances of the case might require, and of course, under the crossing rule, the vessel which has to keep out of the way is authorised to do so by either one of several means, as the case may seem to require. I do not think the matter ought to be tied down to any narrow interpretation of the rule. But even if it was so, I think in this case it is right to say that the course taken by the Minnetonka, according to her own story, was a course authorised by the rules. According to her case, when the other vessel which was approaching her ported, she thought it right to port also, and it is by no means certain that might not be brought within the crossing rule, which imposes a duty of keeping out of the way, and authorises it to be done by any appropriate means; but that in the larger sense of the word her course was authorised by the rule appears to me clear. On the
6 (1902), 9 Asp. M.L.C. (N.S.) 316 (Adm.).
whole, therefore, it appears to me that under the circumstances of this case the obligation of whistling was imposed upon Minnetonka at an earlier time than the officer who was in charge thought it necessary to whistle. He did at a later period whistle, and quite rightly. The reason he gave for not doing so before, which I do not wish to press against him, though it probably reflects the mind of a good many sailors, was that he did not think it was necessary to obey the rule, except in the case of vessels meeting in narrow waters. I wish emphatically to say that the rule is not so limited, and it is necessary to say that with some emphasis, because the experience of this court shows that the rule has not been followed by the nautical world with the completeness which its terms demand. I hope captains in future will err, if they err at all, on the side of whistling.
This was approved by the Court of Appeal in The Anselm,' Lord Alverstone C.J. saying for the Court [at page 440]:
Upon the question of the construction of the word "authorised" we have had cited to us the decision of a very distinguished judge, Lord St. Helier, when President of the Admiralty Divi sion, who, of course, had very great experience. He, in The Uskmoor (ubi sup.), has given a construction of the word "authorised" which certainly commends itself to me, and which I think it is very desirable to uphold, for the reason that it is so extremely necessary that if any course is being taken which is not absolutely required, but is a course which is "authorised" and therefore permitted, notice should be given to the other ship as to the manoeuvre that is being undertaken.
In The Hero,' it was contended that the Rule did not apply where the alteration was a wrong or negligent one since such a move was not "author- ized" by the Rules. The Court held otherwise. Kennedy L.J. wrote:
We cannot accede to such a contention. If it were sound, the strange result would follow that in the present case, and in all like cases, a vessel which took a proper course either required by the rules or, as a seamanlike course, authorized by the rules, but which omitted to make the appropriate sound signal according to art. 28, would incur the penalty incident to statutory blame, whereas a vessel which in precisely the same circumstances took a wrong and unseamanlike course, neither required nor authorized by the rules, and gave no sound signal to indicate that course, would, so far as regards the absence of
(1907), 10 Asp. M.L.C. (N.S.) 438 (C.A.). 8 [1911] P. 128 (C.A.), at p. 159.
an appropriate sound signal, go scot free. We do not think that the language of art. 28, fairly and reasonably interpreted, involves such a conclusion. We do not think that the words "taking any course authorized or required by these rules" limit the application of the rule to the case of a course which, at the trial of a collision action, is found by the Court to have been authorized or required by the rules. We ought, it appears to us, to interpret the words as including any course alleged to have been taken by a vessel acting, whether under art. 27 or art. 29, or under the other articles, so as to avoid immediate danger. So that where, as here, a vessel charged in an action with having taken—in acting for the other vessel—an improper course, causing or contributing to a collision, asserts in that action, as the Hero does here, that the manoeuvre was a proper course under the rules, she cannot successfully contend that because the Court holds that her story of the facts is an untrue story, and that upon the true facts the course taken by her was neither a course required nor authorized by the rules, she thereby gains exemption from liability from statutory blame for not sounding the signal appropriate to that course. It was a course which those in charge of the vessel professed at the time to take, and the owners of the vessel sought to justify in the action, as a course either authorized or required by the rules.
The respondent's case, as I understand it, is based on the situation having been a passing or head-on situation in which the vessels should pass port-to-port. For the master of the Algobay the situation was thus one of the kind to which Rule 14(a) refers. By the time the course of the Algobay was altered from 135° to 145° her master had sensed the need to go to starboard to avoid a close-quarters situation. He made the alterations when the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco closed to the point where they were nearly in line. This is the situation described in Rule 14(b). Accordingly, it seems to me that if he was to proceed on the assumption that the Cielo Bianco was aware of the approach of the Algobay and that he was entitled to alter to starboard, the facts required for the application of Rule 34(a) were present.
In my opinion, having determined to make the alteration to starboard, Rule 34(a) required that the Algobay's whistle be sounded to signal the alteration to the Cielo Bianco. Had it been sound ed it might have been heard and if so it would have told those in charge of the Cielo Bianco both that
there was a ship under way in the position of the Algobay and that she was altering her course to starboard. That might well have been sufficient to enable the Cielo Bianco to avoid the collision. But to have that effect the signal, if given, would have to be heard and having regard to the distance of about a mile which at that time separated the two ships and to the fact that the Algobay's whistle, when sounded later when the ships were much closer to one another, was not heard by the Cielo Bianco it seems to me that, on balance, the proba bility is that the whistle would not have been heard. Accordingly, while I regard the failure to sound the whistle on making the alteration to starboard as a breach of the Rule, I am unable to conclude that such failure was a cause of the collision.
The fourth submission was that the Algobay did not have on duty a deck watch that complied with the Ships' Deck Watch Regulations and that if such a watch had been on duty and functioning as it should have been functioning the master would have been better able to watch the movements of the Cielo Bianco and would not have made his alterations to starboard. This raised an issue which the learned Trial Judge mentioned early in his reasons when relating the particulars of negligence alleged against the Algobay, but which he did not discuss.
The Ships' Deck Watch Regulations as I under stand them required that the Algobay have on duty a deck watch, of which the master could not be a member, consisting of a person in charge of the deck watch, an additional person and a person qualified in the use of a radio-telephone. By defini tion the deck watch means that part of a ship's complement that is required for the purpose of attending to the navigation and security of the ship. Included in the duties relating to the naviga tion of the ship are those defined in Rules 5 and 7 of the Collision Regulations respecting look-out and risk of collision.
The personnel who could be regarded as the deck watch of the Algobay at the material time consisted of the first mate and the seaman who was with him in the anchor windlass compartment
under the forecastle and possibly the helmsman who, with the master, was in the wheel-house. In my view, the watch so organized did not comply with the Regulations. The officer of the watch, stationed as he had been by the master in the anchor windlass compartment, was not in fact in charge of the watch. He was at most in charge of the seaman who was with him in the anchor windlass compartment. In no way was he, as offi cer of the watch, in charge of the helmsman or what he was doing. Moreover, the master, who had qualification in the use of radio-telephones, was not subject to that officer's control and in any event could not be considered a member of the watch so as to fulfill that requirement.
More importantly, neither the officer of the watch nor any other member of the watch was in a position to carry out the duties imposed by Rules 5 and 7 of the Collision Regulations to keep a proper look-out and to determine if risk of collision existed as indeed, as matters turned out, it did.
However, the failure to have on duty a deck watch that complied with the Ships' Deck Watch Regulations would not in itself give rise to liability unless it were shown to have been a cause of the collision. In the present situation the result, as I see it, was that the whole responsibility for the navigation of the ship including that of observing the Rules fell on the master alone, unassisted by any of his crew who might have been assigned to watch and report the developing situation either visually or by radar. He alone had to make the calculations, using the chart and radar, to lay out his 135° course and later his 145° course. He alone had to keep the look-out for the Cielo Bianco and for any other ships in the bay. He alone had to operate the engines and the whistle. He alone had to make the attempt to contact the Cielo Bianco by radio-telephone. He alone had continuously to observe and appreciate the developing situation and determine what action was required. And when the situation ultimately became critical, if not indeed much earlier, he had far too much to
do. Speaking of his whistle signal to the first mate, he said:
Q. And you indicated that the Mate called you when you
made that whistle.
A. He called.
Q. What was it that he called you on? A. He called me on the walkie-talkie.
HIS LORDSHIP: I don't, I don't understand why you made a call, you put a call on the whistle. That you did not intend, you did not inform the, you did not intend that call to inform the other ship of anything, you just intended to call your Mate. You had a walkie-talkie and he had a walkie-talkie, I don't understand why you didn't simply get him on the walkie-talkie.
A. Well, at that stage there was no time. I had the engine to look after, I had the starboard alteration, I had to call to the other ship. It was at, at the period of time when I had no, no time to reach for the walkie-talkie. All I wanted to get was his attention—to this day I can't even say if I wanted to ask him to get out there, if I wanted to ask him to stand by anchors, I can't say at this stage exactly what my intentions were for him.
Despite this, however, I do not think that the evidence establishes, and it would thus be specula tive to conclude, that the presence of a look-out in addition to the master himself, either on the bridge or elsewhere on the ship, would have enabled the master to be informed earlier than he himself detected that the Cielo Bianco's masthead lights were closing. Accordingly, I do not think that the failure to have on duty a deck watch that complied with the Ships' Deck Watch Regulations can itself be regarded as a cause of the collision. It may, however, be noted that the look-out that Captain Carlsen was able to keep was not as constant as it could have been since he did not see the red and green lights of the Cielo Bianco in the interval when both would have been visible nor did he recollect ever seeing the Cielo Bianco's green light.
But the issue of fault does not end there. The argument, which extended over some seven days, included submissions that the master of the Algobay should have perceived earlier than he did that there was risk of collision and should have taken action earlier to avoid it and that it was his alterations to starboard which brought the ships into collision.
As previously mentioned, at the time when the Algobay came on her course of 135°, the course of the Cielo Bianco diverged by some 28° from that of the Algobay. From the Algobay the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco were seen to be well open. In the period of some eight minutes thereaf ter until the alteration to 145° was made, the angle of divergence was reduced to the point where the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco were nearly in line. As to this, Captain Carlsen's evi dence in chief was:
A. As I proceeded out on the 135 CIELO BIANCO was still heading inbound and on the 135 I saw him as if he was starting to fall off.
HIS LORDSHIP: Oh, excuse me, fall off you mean coming back?
A. Yes.
Q. Coming back towards your course? A. Towards me.
Q. Yes.
A. Which did not initially do anything different to the meeting situation because his bearing was still getting larger as I was proceeding out he was drawing further aft and the bearing was getting larger all the time.
Q. Yes, I understand.
A. When he got close to being in line he had fallen off I looked in the radar and I altered the course over to be .5 off Pointe...
MTRE. HYNDMAN: I didn't hear that.
THE WITNESS: I altered the course over to be .5 off Pointe à
la Marmite which gave me a course of 145.
HIS LORDSHIP: You mean .5 to be half ('h) a mile off?
A. That is correct.
Q. Altered it to .5 off Pointe à la Marmite. That is when you saw him—when did you do that, did you say?
A. Well, I believe it was at the time, if I remember correctly, it was at the time he was getting close to his range like [lights] getting closer to being in line.
The learned Trial Judge has found that the actions taken by the master of the Algobay as soon as and from the time he realized that a dangerous situation had arisen were correct. I see no reason to disagree with that view. At that point there was an emergency situation. But that does not resolve the question whether Captain Carlsen should have realized earlier that there was a risk of collision and taken action to avoid it. The learned Trial Judge also found that the Algobay's alteration of course from 135° to 145° was made to avoid a close-passing situation at a time when her master "had not anticipated nor had he any reason to anticipate that the Cielo Bianco would be turning further to port and that immediate danger of collision would therefore arise". As a finding of fact I do not disagree with the view that the master had not anticipated that the Cielo Bianco would be turning further to port. But Captain Carlsen had no indication from the Cielo Bianco as to what she was doing other than that she was in a continuing turn to port and the finding that he had no reason to anticipate that the Cielo Bianco would be turning further to port is based, as I read the reasons, not on the information Captain Carl - sen had at the time but on the view of the learned Trial Judge which he expressed in the passage I have already cited from his reasons and in an earlier passage as well when he said:
... even if the Algobay had actually been aware of the inten tion of the Cielo Bianco to proceed to Pointe Noire, as long as the lights of the Cielo Bianco were open to the Algobay, having regard to the distance between the ships at that time, and even when they began to close and up to the time when they began to open to port, the Algobay would still be entitled to assume that the Cielo Bianco would allow it to pass and would turn to port around its stern. [Emphasis added.]
That the master of the Algobay in fact relied on such assumptions is apparent from his evidence. He described what he saw initially of the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco as "when he was coming
in they were well open", he considered the situa tion to be one of ships passing and that it would be a normal port-to-port meeting situation unless the Cielo Bianco, by radio-telephone, sought agree ment with him to pass starboard-to-starboard. He said in answer to a question on cross-examination:
A. I presume what I should be assuming is that he gave an order of port wheel and put the ship half a head down, now I know it today. But there was no point at the time during that incident that I could visualise that the man ordered a port wheel and half a head in his telegraph, and particularly not when the ship was drawing aft on me. It was impossible for me to visualise the man doing that. I feel that, in that position, I had the right to assume that being one ship in front of the other, that surely I could have the right to assume that the man could look at my ship as I could look at his; and I would appear in exactly the same fashion as what I saw him appear.
The result was that relying on such assumption and on the fact that the bearing of the Cielo Bianco appeared to be increasing Captain Carlsen, even while observing while on his 135° course that the lights of the Cielo Bianco had begun to close and continued to close to the point where they were almost in line, took no action to ascertain what in fact the Cielo Bianco was doing until, some time after altering to 145°, on seeing the lights open the Cielo Bianco's starboard side, he attempted to call her on the radio-telephone. By that time, however, there was nothing he could effectively do to avoid the Cielo Bianco. He did what he could to minimize the collision and in light of the Trial Judge's findings he is not to be faulted for the actions he took. But it seems clear that had he not relied on his assumptions as to what the Cielo Bianco was doing or would do he would and should have been alerted by her con tinuing change of direction toward his course that something different from a normal port-to-port passing could be and was in fact developing. At any point in that period the risk might have disap peared had the Cielo Bianco steadied on her course but while Captain Carlsen may have hoped and expected that that would happen he had noth ing but his assumption on which to base the action he took in continuing at increasing speed on his
135° course and then on his 145° course while the direction of the Cielo Bianco, as indicated by her falling off, was changing toward her path by some 25 to 28 degrees.
With respect, and indeed with hesitation as well because of the fact that the learned Trial Judge had the assistance of two experienced assessors, I am of the opinion that the learned Trial Judge in the passages I have cited from his reasons has expressed and relied on a wrong rule in judging the actions of the master of the Algobay. There may have been every temptation for a master in his situation to assume that those in charge of an approaching ship had seen his ship and would act in accordance with good seamanship and the Regulations. It may indeed have been inconceiv able to Captain Carlsen that in the circumstances a ship of the proportions of the Cielo Bianco would not have a proper look-out, would not have detect ed the presence of the Algobay, would not keep her course but would turn to port across the Algobay's path.
But the Collision Regulations, as I read them, do not allow a master to rely on such assumptions.
The Regulations are entitled "Regulations for the Prevention of Collisions". They provide in section 4 that:
4. The owner, master or person in charge of a vessel shall ensure that the vessel complies with the Rules set out in Schedule I and the provisions of Schedules II to VII. [Emphasis added.]
Schedule I is entitled "International Regula tions for Preventing Collisions at Sea, 1972" and by section 3 they apply to every Canadian and foreign vessel in the waters where the collision occurred.
These Rules came into effect on July 15, 1977 [SOR/77-579]. They differ materially from the earlier Rules which they replaced and should be regarded as a new code. Jurisprudence developed on the earlier Rules must therefore be regarded
with caution as the effect of the new Rules renders at least some of it obsolete. See Bank of England v. Vagliano Brothers. 9 This is so particularly in relation to when risk of collision is to be deemed to exist.
Under the heading "Steering and Sailing Rules", Rules 5, 7 and 8 provide:
RULE 5 Look-out
Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight and hearing as well as by all available means appropriate in the prevailing circumstances and conditions so as to make a full appraisal of the situation and of the risk of collision.
RULE 7
Risk of Collision
(a) Every vessel shall use all available means appropriate to the prevailing circumstances and conditions to determine if risk of collision exists. If there is any doubt such risk shall be deemed to exist.
(b) Proper use shall be made of radar equipment if fitted and operational, including long-range scanning to obtain early warning of risk of collision and radar plotting or equivalent systematic observation of detected objects.
(c) Assumptions shall not be made on the basis of scanty information, especially scanty radar information.
(d) In determining if risk of collision exists the following considerations shall be among those taken into account:
(i) such risk shall be deemed to exist if the compass bearing of an approaching vessel does not appreciably change,
(ii) such risk may sometimes exist even when an appre ciable bearing change is evident, particularly when approaching a very large vessel or a tow or when approaching a vessel at close range.
RULE 8
Action to avoid Collision
(a) Any action taken to avoid collision shall, if the circum stances of the case admit, be positive, made in ample time and with due regard to the observance of good seamanship.
(b) Any alteration of course and/or speed to avoid collision shall, if the circumstances of the case admit, be large
9 ,[1891] A.C. 107 (H.L.), at pp. 144-145.
enough to be readily apparent to another vessel observing visually or by radar; a succession of small alterations of course and/or speed should be avoided.
(c) If there is sufficient sea room, alteration of course alone may be the most effective action to avoid a close-quarters situation provided that it is made in good time, is substan tial and does not result in another close-quarters situation.
(d) Action taken to avoid collision with another vessel shall be such as to result in passing at a safe distance. The effec tiveness of the action shall be carefully checked until the other vessel is finally past and clear.
(e) If necessary to avoid collision or allow more time to assess the situation, a vessel shall slacken her speed or take all way off by stopping or reversing her means of propulsion.
Rule 5 of these Rules is new. Earlier Rules had not purported to set a standard for the look-out to be kept by a vessel beyond saying that nothing in the Rules should exonerate any vessel from the consequences of neglect to keep a "proper" look out. See Rule 29 of the 1965 Rules, P.C. 1965- 1552 [SOR/65-395]. Rule 2 of the present Rules covers some of the subject-matter of Rule 29 of the 1965 Rules but no longer refers to look-out.
Rule 7 is also substantially new. Indeed the only portion of it that was in the earlier Rules is subparagraph (i) of paragraph (d).
Except for paragraph (a), Rule 8 is also new. In particular, Rule 8(e) is new in requiring any ves- sel—not merely any vessel that is required to keep out of the way of another—to slacken speed or take all way off "if necessary to ... allow more time to assess the situation". This may be com pared with former Rule 23 which imposed the duty only on a vessel directed by the Rules to keep out of the way of another.
These Rules, as I read them, reflect the develop ment of mechanical and electrical devices with which both large and small modern ships are equipped in aid of safe navigation. The Rules require not only that a look-out be kept as required by Rule 5 so as to make a full appraisal of the situation and of the risk of collision but also that
all available means appropriate to the prevailing circumstances and conditions be taken to deter mine if risk of collision exists. If there is any doubt such risk is to be deemed to exist and the ship must act accordingly. For this purpose proper use is to be made of radar equipment and assumptions are not to be made on the basis of scanty information.
Here, at the time the lights of the Cielo Bianco were seen to be closing and throughout the period of about eight minutes before he altered to 145° and thereafter until the Cielo Bianco's lights came in line and then opened her starboard side, Cap tain Carlsen did not know where she was going. He did not know why her lights were closing. He did not know her speed. He had not had the slightest indication that his ship had been seen by the Cielo Bianco and no use was being made of the Algobay's radar to determine precisely what the Cielo Bianco was doing or how fast she was moving so as to obtain early warning of risk of collision. In short, his information was scanty. And though Captain Carlsen knew her direction was changing so as to bring her course closer to his and he also knew she was a large ship, he continued to rely, contrary to Rule 7(d)(ii), on the mere fact that her bearing was increasing. In my view, in the circumstances as described by Captain Carlsen, it was incumbent on him from soon after the lights of the Cielo Bianco began to close and thus to indicate a change in her direction, that is to say, while the Algobay was on her 135° course and much earlier than her alteration to 145°, to assume or deem that risk of collision existed, as in fact it did, and since he could not at his speed and in confined waters take on his own the sort of positive action to avoid collision contemplated by Rules 8(b) and 8(c), it was incumbent on him to act as required by Rule 8(e) to slacken his speed and, if necessary, to take all the way off his ship until, by radio-telephone or otherwise, the inten tion of the Cielo Bianco could be ascertained and the risk of collision obviated.
I am accordingly of the opinion that the Algobay cannot be absolved of fault in causing the collision. In the critical period while she was on her 135° course from the time when the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco were seen to be closing her look-out was not up to the standard required by Rule 5 as "all available means appropriate in the prevailing circumstances and conditions" were not being used so as to make a full appraisal of the risk of collision. The radar was not being constant ly attended and used to plot or ascertain the Cielo Bianco's course and her speed. The radio-tele phone was not used as, in compliance with Rule 7(a), it ought to have been used to contact the Cielo Bianco to ascertain what her intentions were and whether there was risk of collision. As previ ously indicated, she proceeded on assumptions based on scanty information. She disregarded the counsel of Rule 7(d)(ii) that, where a large ship is involved, risk of collision may exist despite an appreciable bearing change. She should have deemed risk of collision to exist shortly after observing that the masthead lights of the Cielo Bianco were closing and should have acted much earlier than she did to try to contact the Cielo Bianco by radio-telephone and failing contact to slacken her speed or take her way off in order to allow more time to assess the situation.
But in my view her fault was not of the same degree as that of the Cielo Bianco, the fault of the Cielo Bianco being much greater than that of the Algobay. I would apportion 75% of the liability for the collision to the Cielo Bianco and 25% to the Algobay. I would vary the judgment accordingly.
Pre-judgment Interest
In dealing with this issue the learned Trial Judge noted that the parties had agreed that inter est to be included in the damages should run from the date upon which expenses were incurred and from the date when revenue was lost, as the case might be. The parties had also agreed that the average "prime rate", a term that refers to the rate at which chartered banks will lend to their most
credit-worthy customers, as determined and pub lished by the Bank of Canada, was 14.43% over the period between November 1978 and the con clusion of the trial in March 1984. Noting as well that the respondent had indicated it would be content with a rate between 14% and 14.43% and that in the few months since the trial interest rates had declined to some extent, the learned Trial Judge fixed the rate at 14%.
The appellants' submission was that instead of basing his conclusion on the average prime rate, the learned Trial Judge should have fixed a rate equivalent to the rate of interest paid each month on monies deposited in Court. In support of this position counsel relied on the decision of this Court in Davie Shipbuilding Limited v. The Queen 10 where, in the absence of other material on which to found a conclusion, the Court adopted a rate of interest based on that paid on monies in Court.
The learned Trial Judge, after reviewing the principle on which pre-judgment interest is includ ed in the damages awarded in admiralty cases, cited four respects in which the case before him differed from that in the Davie Shipbuilding case and reached the conclusion that, on the evidence before him and the circumstances of the case, the average of the prime bank rates would be the fairest measure to apply.
That the rate of interest to be included is a matter for the exercise of discretion by the trial judge is well settled and I see no reason to think that the Trial Judge erred in any respect in fixing the rate at 14% from the times as agreed by the parties to the date of his judgment, November 22, 1984. Accordingly, I would affirm that conclusion.
However, as the result of the judgment of the learned Trial Judge was to deny recovery of any damages on the appellants' counterclaim, he had no occasion to deal with the rate of interest that
10 [19841 I F.C. 461.
should be included in any such damages after the date of his judgment and specifically up to the time when such damages might be held to be recoverable in this Court. He did have occasion to fix the rate of post-judgment interest which, on the basis of the information at hand, he set at 14%. It is common knowledge, however, that interest rates have fallen dramatically in the meantime, a trend which the learned Trial Judge noted in fixing 14% rather than the average prime rate of 14.43%.
Information provided by the Registry, as set out in the Appendix to these reasons, shows that in the period from November 1978 to October 1984 the monthly rate of interest earned by money in Court rose, with some oscillations, from 9.24% in November 1978 to 18.77% in August 1981, fell to 8.21% in may 1983 and thereafter rose again to 10.64% in October 1984. The average of these monthly rates over this period was 11.44%, that is to say, 2.56% less than the 14% fixed by the learned Trial Judge for the same period.
In the period since then, that is to say from November 1984 to February 1987, the average rate of interest earned by money in Court has been 8.34%. Assuming that the average prime rate in the same period has been higher than this rate and that the difference has been approximately the same as in the earlier period, I think it would be fair to fix the rate of pre-judgment interest in the period from November 1984 to February 1987 at 10.50%. The appellants will accordingly be entitled to include in their damages on the counterclaim simple interest thereon at 14% per annum from the time when expenses were incurred or losses of revenue were sustained to November 22, 1984, and at the rate of 10.50% per annum from that date to the date of this judgment.
Post-judgment Interest
That brings me to the question of post-judgment interest which the learned Trial Judge, on the basis of the average prime rates over the period of some five and one-half years previous to the trial, fixed at 14%. That of course involved an element of forecast of what interest rates were likely to be in the months ahead. In fact, as matters have turned out, interest rates have been substantially lower than 14% in the meantime.
That a court of appeal will interfere with a trial judgment based to some extent on a forecast which has not been borne out by subsequent events seems to be well established. See Mercer et al. v. Sijan et al.;" McCann v. Sheppard;' 2 Curwen v. James;" and Murphy v. Stone Wallwork (Charlton) Ltd. 14 These are all cases on damage awards but the principle is a broad one. It was applied by the House of Lords in Attorney-General v. Birming- ham, Tame and Rea District Drainage Board 15 in confirming the dissolution by the Court of Appeal of a perpetual injunction granted at trial. In my opinion, it is broad enough to apply to a rate of post-judgment interest fixed to some extent on the basis of a forecast which, by the time an appeal is heard, turns out to be wrong. I am also of the opinion that the authority of this Court under subparagraph 52(b)(î) of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] to give the judgment that the Trial Division should have given is broad enough to authorize the Court to give the judgment which in its opinion is the appropriate judgment to be given on the situation as it appears at the time of the hearing of the appeal.
We were informed that, in order to stop the accrual of further interest at 14%, the Trial Divi sion judgment was in fact paid on September 6, 1985. In the nine-month interval, the average monthly rate of interest earned on monies in Court
" (1977), 14 O.R. (2d) 12 (C.A.).
12 [197 3] 2 All ER 881 (C.A.).
13 [1963] 2 All E.R. 619 (C.A.).
14 [1969] 2 All E.R. 949 (H.L.).
15 [1912] A.C. 788 (H.L.), at p. 801.
was 8.93%. In the interval from September 1985 to February 1987, it was 8.%. While adding 2.56% would yield higher rates, having regard to the rate of 10.50% which I have calculated should be included in the damages to be assessed on the appellants' counterclaim from November 22, 1984 to the date of this judgment, and on the basis of facts relating to the decline in interest rates since the judgment of November 1984 not known by the learned Trial Judge, it would, I think, be fair to both parties to fix the rate of post-judgment inter est at the same 10.50% from November 22, 1984 and I would vary the judgment accordingly.
In the result, I would allow the appeal with costs and
(1) vary the judgment so as to adjudge the Algobay in fault for the collision to the extent of 25%, and the Cielo Bianco in fault to the extent of 75%;
(2) vary the judgment so as to adjudge the respondent entitled to recover 75% of its dam ages and 75% of its costs of the action and the appellants entitled to recover 25% of their dam ages and 25% of their costs of the action and that the said amounts be set off and judgment entered for the difference in favour of the party entitled to it;
(3) vary the rate of post-judgment interest to be paid by the appellants on the judgment of November 22, 1984, as varied by paragraph (2), to 10.50% per annum;
(4) fix the rate of interest to be included in the damages recoverable by the appellants at 14% per annum from the time when expenses were incurred and losses of revenues were sustained to November 22, 1984, and at 10.50% per annum from that date to the date of judgment herein;
(5) fix the rate of interest to be paid on the judgment to be entered for the difference referred to in paragraph (2) at 10.50% per annum.
PRATTE J.: I agree.
MACGuIGAN J.: I agree.
APPENDIX
STATISTICAL DATA
Interest Rate on Security Deposits (P.C. 1970-300)
1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
January 9.70 12.19 15.14 13.02 8.58 8.76 8.56 9.02 6.93
February 9.71 12.19 15.18 13.09 8.46 8.78 9.51 10.40
March 9.80 12.91 14.97 13.35 8.29 9.20 9.97 9.44
April 9.76 14.18 15.13 13.56 8.29 9.51 8.93 8.32
May 9.75 11.76 16.52 13.57 8.21 10.14 8.60 7.57
June 9.74 9.77 16.95 14.45 8.32 10.48 8.42 7.74
July 9.84 9.10 17.34 14.24 8.32 11.53 8.25 7.46
August 10.19 9.16 18.77 12.97 8.41 10.99 8.12 7.50
September 10.41 9.57 17.81 11.93 8.34 10.87 8.06 7.49
October 11.40 10.41 16.58 10.60 8.30 10.64 7.72 7.49
November 9.24 12.25 11.46 14.28 9.65 8.38 9.83 7.85 7.45
December 9.37 12.27 14.52 13.33 9.23 8.72 9.12 8.17 7.39
APPENDICE
DONNÉES STATISTIQUES
Taux de l'intérêt payé sur les dépôts de garantie (C.P. 1970-300)
1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
Janvier 9,70 12,19 15,14 13,02 8,58 8,76 8,56 9,02 6,93
Février 9,71 12,19 15,18 13,09 8,46 8,78 9,51 10,40
Mars 9,80 12,91 14,97 13,35 8,29 9,20 9,97 9,44
Avril 9,76 14,18 15,13 13,56 8,29 9,51 8,93 8,32
Mai 9,75 11,76 16,52 13,57 8,21 10,14 8,60 7,57
Juin 9,74 9,77 16,95 14,45 8,32 10,48 8,42 7,74
Juillet 9,84 9,10 17,34 14,24 8,32 11,53 8,25 7,46
Août 10,19 9,16 18,77 12,97 8,41 10,99 8,12 7,50
Septembre 10,41 9,57 17,81 11,93 8,34 10,87 8,06 7,49
Octobre 11,40 10,41 16,58 10,60 8,30 10,64 7,72 7,49
Novembre 9,24 12,25 11,46 14,28 9,65 8,38 9,83 7,85 7,45
Décembre 9,37 12,27 14,52 13,33 9,23 8,72 9,12 8,17 7,39
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