Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-3830-76
Romulo C. Manalaysay, Luisito M. Villaflor, Manuel M. Tumbokon, Felipe G. Gensaya Jr., Leopoldo M. Gawaran, Alejandro S. Galanga, Danilo De La Cruz, Luis P. Pena, Juanito L. Lucero, Crus C. Sablon, Gladio N. Ruiz, Rodolfo C. Gonzales, Arturo B. Adolfo, Sigfredo L. Torres, Joselito M. Pajarillo, Felizardo T. Rozul, Vin- cente L. Losbanes, Antonia F. Magbanua, Domin- go G. Corcochea, Agapito A. Mallorca, Antonio P. Panaquiton, Rodolphe D. Celorico (Plaintiffs)
v.
The Vessel Oriental Victory (Defendant)
Trial Division, Walsh J.—Montreal, June 28; Ottawa, July 8, 1977.
Maritime law — Labour contracts — Individual contracts signed by crew members in the Philippines — Collective agreement between union and ship owners subsequently signed — Crew members not party to collective agreement and union ized only after agreement signed — Whether or not the crew can claim the unpaid difference in pay between the lower wage rate of the individual contracts and the more favourable rate of the collective agreement — Quebec Civil Code, art. 1029.
The crew members of the Oriental Victory signed individual employment contracts in the Philippines with the vessel's owners. Before the expiry of these contracts, the owners signed an agreement with the International Transport Workers' Fed eration, undertaking to apply all sections of the ITF collective agreement to all seafarers on board the vessel. The defendant paid the crew a higher wage rate as per the ITF contract, but only in ports where the union possessed affiliated unions, and paid a lower rate as per the individual contracts the rest of the time. The plaintiffs claim the difference in pay not received between the rates provided in each individual contract and the collective agreement.
Held, the action is allowed. The defendant voluntarily (even though perhaps under -considerable pressure) entered into an agreement to man the vessel with an ITF crew, knowing full well that this would result in higher rates of pay than those called for in the individual agreements with the members of the crew. Once the vessel was at sea it then failed to fulfil the terms of the agreement which, although made with the ITF by defendant, was for the benefit of the individual crew members. While the individual crew members were bound by the terms of the individual contracts which they had signed, matters were in effect taken out of their hands by the contract signed by the owners with ITF and must be considered as replacing the individual agreements. The plaintiffs are entitled to the higher rates of pay.
ACTION.
COUNSEL:
J. Nuss, Q.C., and G. Waxman for plaintiffs.
E. Baudry for defendant. SOLICITORS:
Ahern, Nuss & Drymer, Montreal, for plaintiffs.
Chauvin, Marler & Baudry, Montreal, for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
WALSH J.: This action was heard at the same time as an action bearing Court No. T-4791-76 between the same parties in which the issues are the same. Plaintiffs are all seamen who were engaged by individual contracts of employment entered into in Manila in the Philippines with Okada Kaiun Company Limited of Osaka, Japan, managers of the vessel M/V Oriental Victory of Panamanian registry and operating under the flag of that country to serve as crew commencing February 2, 1976. The agreements of employment were to be of twelve months' duration and called for the wage scale and other benefits set out therein and were filed with the National Seamen's Board in Manila. They were flown to Ghent in Belgium where the ship was located at the time to replace the former crew who were leaving the vessel there. The former crew had become mem bers of the International Transport Workers' Fed eration (hereinafter referred to as the ITF).
While in Belgium the captain of the vessel, on behalf of Okada Kaiun Company Limited who had sent a representative there to enter into negotia tions signed an agreement on March 5, 1976, with the ITF whereby it was undertaken to apply all sections of the ITF collective agreement dated September 1, 1975, to all seafarers on board the vessel and to incorporate the terms of the ITF collective agreement into the articles of agreement of each seafarer. It appears that no articles of agreement had been signed by the crew at that time, each being engaged only by the terms of the individual shipboard employment contracts signed in Manila. I do not consider this to be of critical significance, however, since paragraph 1 of the
collective agreement dated September 1, 1975, incorporated by reference into the special agree ment made on behalf of the defendant with the ITF provides that it shall apply to seafarers serv ing in the vessel referred to in the special agree ment and article 2 states:
A seafarer to whom this Collective Agreement is applicable, in accordance with paragraph 1 above, shall be covered by the agreement with effect from the date on which he is engaged, whether he has signed articles or not, until the date on which he signs off and/or the date until which, in accordance with this agreement, the company is liable for the payment of wages. [Emphasis mine.]
Pursuant to the special agreement the company paid the entrance fee of $12.00 U.S. and member ship fee of $24.00 U.S. per annum on behalf of each seafarer as well as the yearly contribution to the welfare fund. The individual crew members were not asked to sign any membership application form in order to join the union and were allegedly not even aware that they were members until some time in June, 1976, when, in Brisbane, Australia, as a result of pressure brought by the ITF, they received pay for forty-two days according to the ITF scale of pay which was considerably higher than the rate at which they had individually con tracted to work in Manila. In due course the union sent individual membership cards for each member to the company, and the company forwarded these to the Master of the Oriental Victory in Brisbane to distribute to the members of the crew.
Defendant pleads that to avoid delaying the vessel and prevent further disputes, although it was in no way obligated to do so under the plain tiffs' existing contracts of employment, it paid them additional amounts corresponding to the dif ference, for a total of 42 days spent by the vessel in ports where the International Transport Workers' Federation possessed affiliated unions, between their contractual scale and the ITF scale. During the rest of the period, however, between March 5, 1976, and October 31, 1976, they were paid according to the scale called for by their original individual contracts of employment made in Manila, which was significantly lower. By a re-amended statement of claim filed at the trial by the parties by consent it is stated that the total amount of wages owing to plaintiffs collectively as of October 31, 1976, was $142,773.48. Their con tracts of employment were terminated on January 23, 1977, unilaterally by the owners of the vessel
and plaintiffs were repatriated to the Philippines and claim leave pay totalling $12,963.60. The re-amended statement of claim goes on to state that the total claim is therefore $166,039.39.' The rate of exchange on the American dollar at 5.5% is then calculated on this total as amounting to $9,132.16, making a total claim of $175,171.55.
The other action bearing Court No. T-4791-76 is for wages for the month of November only and for this according to the amended statement of claim the additional wages and benefits owing total $19,279.24 to which $1,060.30 is added as the result of calculating the exchange on the American dollar at 5.5% resulting in a total claim of $20,339.60 collectively, again to be divided amongst the plaintiffs in accordance with details to be furnished to the Court. 2
While dealing with the figures it may be said that counsel for the parties was asked by the Court to make the individual calculations and did so after a brief adjournment. The totals included the claim for the month of November, and hence the amount due in the two actions in the event of judgment in favour of the plaintiffs, and also including such items as extra weekends, statutory holidays, refunds of sums paid to the captain in some cases under pressure after the ship left Aus- tralia and paid leaves, the whole converted to U.S. funds. The amounts can be tabulated as follows:
Romulo C. Manalaysay $ 6,947.53
Luisito M. Villaflor $12,751.12
Manuel M. Tumbokon $11,281.95
Felipe G. Gensaya Jr. $11,139.71
Leopoldo M. Gawaran $ 3,859.60
Alejandro S. Galanga $ 6,705.50
Danilo De La Cruz $ 6,705.50
' This obviously does not balance. Furthermore, the name Agapito A. Mallorca is omitted as a plaintiff in the re-amended statement of claim although included in the initial claim and amounts due him are calculated as part of the total claimed.
2 Again the name Agapito A. Mallorca is omitted though included in the original claim and the amount due him for November is included in the total claim.
Luis P. Pena $ 3,735.11
Juanito L. Lucero $18,683.68
Crus C. Sablon $11,250.30
Gladio N. Ruiz $ 8,314.89
Rodolfo C. Gonzales $ 7,094.79
Arturo B. Adolfo $10,768.69
Sigfredo L. Torres $ 7,044.97
Joselito M. Pajarillo $ 3,735.11
Felizardo T. Rozul $ 5,723.42
Vincente L. Losbanes $ 4,823.74
Antonia F. Magbanua $11,435.36
Domingo G. Corcochea $ 7,300.28
Agapito A. Mallorca $12,750.93
Antonio P. Panaquiton $ 7,298.17
Rodolphe D. Celorico $ 5,683.39
These amounts total $185,033.74 which, while greater than the total shown in the re-amended statement of claim in action T-3830-76 (even before deducting the arithmetical error therein) is not greater than the total amounts claimed in the two actions covering the entire period. While strictly speaking, separate judgments should be rendered in each action for the amounts claimed therein this would involve a recalculation of the figures of each individual claimant so as to delete the amounts claimed for the month of November in each case from the claim in case T-3830-76, after calculating the exchange thereon, and trans fer these amounts to the claim in T-4791-76 lim ited to that month, so as a matter of con venience judgment will be rendered for the total of the amounts claimed in case T-3830-76, even though that total may exceed the amount sought in that action and the judgment in case T-4791-76 will merely show that the amounts claimed and allowed in that action have been awarded in T-3830-76.
During the course of the hearing plaintiffs' counsel pointed out that on December 9, 1976, at Trois-Rivières, Quebec, the crew signed articles of agreement for an overseas voyage to last until March 4, 1977, when the agreement with ITF would terminate. Actually they were discharged on January 23 in Africa and replaced by a crew from Taiwan who are not members of the ITF, and will have additional claims resulting from this dis charge. It was further indicated that they had been
paid in full according to the ITF rates for January, but received only 30% of the amount due from December 9 to the end of the month and from December 1 to December 9 had been paid accord ing to the Philippine rate of pay. Since the present actions bring the claim only up to the end of November, plaintiffs' counsel suggested that a fur ther amendment be permitted so as to include these additional items of claim. Defendant's coun sel opposed this saying that this would bring in new facts and different figures based on the new articles of agreement signed in Trois-Rivières. It appears that he is correct in contending that this claim should become the subject of a new action if desired and should not be made as an incidental demand added to the previous action by amend ments to the proceedings at trial, especially as this would involve production of the new articles of agreement entered into at Trois-Rivières and con sideration of whatever effect they would have on plaintiffs' claims following that date, which is really a new cause of action though some of the issues involved are similar. Accordingly the amendment was refused.
Defendant's counsel was handicapped in his defence by the fact that he indicated he had been unable to receive any further communications or instructions from his clients with respect to wit nesses and accordingly could not produce any. Accordingly, there was no witness as to Philippine law nor did the representative of Okada Kaiun who had been involved in the negotiation of the special agreement with ITF in Ghent prior to March 5, 1976, come to testify. The only witness called by defendant was Felipe Gensaya, the Third Marine Officer of the Oriental Victory, one of the plaintiffs, all of whom had given pre-trial evidence on October 6, 1976, in Montreal by virtue of an order of Dubé J. dated August 4, 1976. The Captain of the vessel, Eudiquio R. Nalcoraz, had been examined for discovery in Montreal by plain tiffs and his examination was taken as read into the record in toto at the trial.
In cross-examination at trial of the witness Brian Laughton, the administrative secretary of the ITF, it was brought out that the Federation has 330 Transport Workers' unions affiliated with it in 87 countries in the Free World, mainly in North Europe but also in developing countries in Africa and the Far East. In Belgium the Transport Workers' Union, Road Transport Workers' Union, Civil Service Union, are affiliated and in Ghent some of the local stevedores are members of Transport Workers' unions so affiliated, as are some of the harbour workers. Boycotts have taken place in Ghent of vessels with crews which are not members of the ITF. The witness did not believe that this took place with respect to the Oriental Victory, however. The vessel had been arrested in Ghent for wages according to the ITF scale, as well as benefits under the individual Philippine agreements, due to the former crew. This claim was settled by agreement between the shipowners and the ITF. He stated that there is no fixed policy in Ghent to boycott vessels whose crews are not affiliated with the ITF but that with respect to vessels flying flags of convenience such as the Oriental Victory pressure is brought to raise the crew's wages to acceptable ITF standards.
While there may be grounds for suspecting that the vessel might not have been allowed to sail from Ghent if her managers had not authorized the captain to sign an agreement with the ITF, and hence that this agreement was entered into under duress, there is no direct evidence from defendant justifying such a finding, and in any event I believe that it must be said that accepted principles for setting aside contracts made under duress cannot be strictly applied in connection with agreements made by an employer with a union. All such contracts are entered into under considerable pres sure, often accompanied by strikes, threats of strikes or boycotts, or as a result of lockouts by the employer, and when a contract is signed after such industrial conflicts as a result of protracted negotiations it should not be set aside on grounds that it was entered into by one party or the other
as the result of duress. This defence therefore must fail.
At an early stage in these proceedings defendant obtained leave to file a conditional appearance to contest the jurisdiction of the Court based on the individual agreements made by plaintiffs, all citi zens of the Philippines. The affidavit had annexed to it extracts from the Labour Code of the Philip- pines which inter alia make it unlawful to substi tute or alter employment contracts approved by the -Department of Labour without its approval and also giving the National Seamen's Board of that country original and exclusive jurisdiction to decide cases arising out of the employment of Filipino seamen on board vessels engaged in over seas trade, such decision to be final and unappeal- able. The authorization for the conditional appear ance was given by judgment of Marceau J. dated November 9, 1976, and gave defendant 15 days to raise these objections before the Court. However, in due course by letter dated November 25, 1976, the Court was advised that defendant could not raise these objections within the delay fixed and a statement of defence was filed which reiterated these contentions.
In the absence of any proof of Philippine law at trial this issue cannot be raised and was not seri ously argued. The only facts before the Court on this issue is that the individual seamen's contracts were signed in the Philippines and bear the stamp of the National Seamen's Board of that country. Even if its approval were required, which has not been established, it is reasonable to assume that this could readily have been obtained for contracts providing substantially higher wages for the seamen in question. Whether such approval would have a retroactive effect or not is not a question which should be gone into here since it is academic in any event.
Defendant's principal defence is based on the fact that the individual crew members were not consulted about joining the ITF and that in the absence of this consent no contract existed be tween them and the ITF, the only agreement being between the ITF and the managers of the defend ant vessel. It was therefore a contract made for the
benefit of third parties and some attempt was made to invoke article 1029 of the Quebec Civil Code which provides that a party to a contract may stipulate for the benefit of a third person and cannot then revoke it if the third person has signi fied his assent to it. It was contended that the evidence of receipt by the members of the crew in Australia of their individual membership cards in the union was not equivalent to acceptance of the contract by them, nor was the receipt of pay at the ITF scale by them while in Australia. Aside from the fact that it is difficult to conceive that they would not have consented to the contract which was to their great advantage, certainly the receipt of pay at the higher rate without protest would be equivalent to consent to the terms of the agree ment, and it would likely have retroactive effect to the date of the agreement. This issue is not impor tant however since I am not of the view that article 1029 of the Quebec Civil Code can be applied merely because the proceedings are brought in Quebec. This is not a procedural matter but a question of substantive law. As Cartwright J., as he then was, said in his dissenting reasons in National Gypsum Company Inc. v. Northern Sales Limited' at page 153:
The substantive law applied by the Exchequer Court on its Admiralty side is, of course, the same throughout Canada and does not vary according to the Admiralty District in which the cause of action arises ....
It would appear that the defendant voluntarily (even though perhaps under s considerable pressure) entered into an agreement in Ghent to man the vessel with an ITF crew, knowing full well that this would result in higher rates of pay than those called for in the individual agreements with the members of the crew who had been flown from the Philippines to Ghent to man the vessel there. Once the vessel was at sea it then failed to fulfil the terms of this agreement which, although made with the ITF by defendant was for the benefit of the individual crew members. While the individual crew members were bound by the terms of the individual contracts which they had signed in accordance with Philippine rates of pay and would no doubt have been prepared to abide by these conditions, matters were in effect taken out of
3 [1964] S.C.R. 144.
their hands by the contract signed by the owners of the defendant vessel with the ITF and I find that this must be considered as replacing the individual agreements, and that plaintiffs are entitled to the higher rates of pay. Had the agreement by the vessel with the ITF called for lower rates of pay or less favourable working conditions, then I believe that plaintiffs might have had the right to repudi ate it, not having been consulted at the time it was entered into. The effects of a contract made for the benefit of third parties who are not parties to it are quite different from the effects of such a contract made to their disadvantage.
The actions are therefore maintained with costs and the following sums are awarded to the follow ing plaintiffs:
Romulo C. Manalaysay $ 6,947.53
Luisito M. Villaflor $ 12,751.12
Manuel M. Tumbokon $ 11,281.95
Felipe G. Gensaya Jr. $ 11,139.71
Leopoldo M. Gawaran $ 3,859.60
Alejandro S. Galanga $ 6,705.50
Danilo De La Cruz $ 6,705.50
Luis P. Pena $ 3,735.11
Juanito L. L,ucero $ 18,683.68
Crus C. Sablon $ 11,250.30
Gladio N. Ruiz $ 8,314.89
Rodolfo C. Gonzales $ 7,094.79
Arturo B. Adolfo $ 10,768.69
Sigfredo L. Torres $ 7,044.97
Joselito M. Pajarillo $ 3,735.11
Felizardo T. Rozul $ 5,723.42
Vincente L. Losbanes $ 4,823.74
Antonia F. Magbanua $ 11,435.36
Domingo G. Corcochea $ 7,300.28
Agapito A. Mallorca $ 12,750.93
Antonio P. Panaquiton $ 7,298.17
Rodolphe D. Celorico $ 5,683.39
TOTAL $185,033.74
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.