Horsley v. MacLaren
Court headnote
Horsley v. MacLaren Collection Supreme Court Judgments Date 1971-10-05 Report [1972] SCR 441 Judges Judson, Wilfred; Ritchie, Roland Almon; Hall, Emmett Matthew; Spence, Wishart Flett; Laskin, Bora On appeal from Ontario Subjects Torts Decision Content Supreme Court of Canada Horsley v. MacLaren [1972] S.C.R. 441 Date: 1971-10-05 Astrid Horsley and Richard J. Horsley, Lawrence A. Horsley, Michael A. Horsley, all infants by their next friend Thomas Robertson (Plaintiffs) Appellants; and Kenneth W. MacLaren and the ship "Ogopogo", and Richard J. Jones (Defendants) Respondents. 1971: May 5, 6; 1971: October 5. Present: Judson, Ritchie, Hall, Spence and Laskin JJ. ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO Negligence-Invited guest on cabin cruiser accidentally falling overboard-Duty of owner-operator to attempt rescue-Another invited guest diving into water in attempt to effect rescue-Dying from shock sustained on contact with icy water-Whether owner-operator negligent in rescue attempt-Whether liable for death of second passenger. M, an invited guest on a cabin cruiser, which was owned and was being operated by the respondent K, accidentally fell overboard. In the course of rescue operations, another invited guest, H, dived into the water to help him. The effort was without avail. The rescuer was pulled from the water by others on board, could not be resuscitated and was later pronounced dead. The body of the rescuee was never recovered. K was first alerted to M's fall wh…
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Horsley v. MacLaren Collection Supreme Court Judgments Date 1971-10-05 Report [1972] SCR 441 Judges Judson, Wilfred; Ritchie, Roland Almon; Hall, Emmett Matthew; Spence, Wishart Flett; Laskin, Bora On appeal from Ontario Subjects Torts Decision Content Supreme Court of Canada Horsley v. MacLaren [1972] S.C.R. 441 Date: 1971-10-05 Astrid Horsley and Richard J. Horsley, Lawrence A. Horsley, Michael A. Horsley, all infants by their next friend Thomas Robertson (Plaintiffs) Appellants; and Kenneth W. MacLaren and the ship "Ogopogo", and Richard J. Jones (Defendants) Respondents. 1971: May 5, 6; 1971: October 5. Present: Judson, Ritchie, Hall, Spence and Laskin JJ. ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO Negligence-Invited guest on cabin cruiser accidentally falling overboard-Duty of owner-operator to attempt rescue-Another invited guest diving into water in attempt to effect rescue-Dying from shock sustained on contact with icy water-Whether owner-operator negligent in rescue attempt-Whether liable for death of second passenger. M, an invited guest on a cabin cruiser, which was owned and was being operated by the respondent K, accidentally fell overboard. In the course of rescue operations, another invited guest, H, dived into the water to help him. The effort was without avail. The rescuer was pulled from the water by others on board, could not be resuscitated and was later pronounced dead. The body of the rescuee was never recovered. K was first alerted to M's fall when the body was only about a boat-length and half behind him. In-stead of following the recommended method of effecting a rescue, i.e., to circle and bring the boat bow on towards the body, he reversed, after putting the engines momentarily in neutral, and backed up to within four or five feet of the body, where he shut off the engines. M, who had been in the water for approximately two minutes, was apparently unconscious and attempts to rescue him with a pike pole and a life-belt were unsuccessful. The boat having begun to drift away, K restarted the engines and again backed towards M. Three or four minutes had now passed since the fall overboard, and it was then that H dived into the water from the stern, coming up about ten feet from M. The latter was seen to fall forward, face and head in the water, and another passenger, J, jumped in, one foot away, to hold up his head but M disappeared beneath the boat. J's husband grabbed the boat controls which K yielded, swung the boat around bow on, and approached J on the starboard side where she was pulled in. K then resumed control and went forward towards H who was then also pulled in but in unconscious condition. Attempts at resuscitation failed. Medical evidence established that H died from shock sustained on contact with the icy water. Two fatal accident actions were brought against K for the benefit of the widows and dependants of the two deceased. H's family succeeded at the trial but their claim was dismissed on appeal, and they then sought restoration by this Court of the favour-able trial judgment. The other claim failed at trial and was not pursued farther. Held (Hall and Laskin H. dissenting) : The appeal should be dismissed. Per Curiam: There was a duty on the part of the respondent K in his capacity as a host and as the owner and operator of the cabin cruiser to do the best he could to effect the rescue of M. Per Judson, Ritchie and Spence JJ.: There was no suggestion that there was any negligence in the rescue of H and for K to be held liable to the appellants it was necessary that such liability stem from a finding that the situation of peril brought about by M falling into the water was thereafter, within the next three or four minutes, so aggravated by the negligence of K in attempting his rescue as to induce H to risk his life by diving in after him. Although the procedure followed by K was not the most highly recommended one, the evidence did not justify a finding that any fault of his induced H to risk his life by diving as he did. If K erred in backing in-stead of turning the cruiser and proceeding "bow on", the error was one of judgment and not negligence, and in the circumstances ought to be excused. Per Hall and Laskin JJ., dissenting: The view that K had been merely guilty of an error of judgment was not accepted. This was not a case where K had failed to execute the required manoeuvre properly, but rather one where he had not followed the method of rescue which, on the uncontradictory evidence, was the proper one to employ in an emergency, and there was no external reason for his failure to do so. This breach of duty to M could properly be regarded as prompting H to attempt a rescue. He was not wanton or foolhardy and his action was not unforeseeable. In the concern of the occasion, and having regard to K's breach of duty, H could not be charged with contributory negligence in acting as he did. [Vanvalkenburg v. Northern Navigation Co. (1913) , 30 O.L.R. 142, overruled; Videan v. British Transport Commission, [1963] 2 Q.B. 650, referred to.] APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario[1], allowing an appeal from a judgment of Lacourciere J. Appeal dismissed, Hall and Laskin JJ. dissenting. W. R. Maxwell and S. M. Malach, for the plaintiffs, appellants. B. L. Eastman and J. A. B. Macdonald, for the defendants, respondents. The judgment of Judson, Ritchie and Spence JJ. was delivered by RITCHIE J.-I have had the opportunity of reading the reasons for judgment of my brother Laskin and I agree with him that the case of Vanvalkenburg v. Northern Navigation Co[2]. should no longer be considered as good law and that a duty rested upon the respondent MacLaren in his capacity as a host and as the owner and operator of the Ogopogo, to do the best he could to effect the rescue of one of his guests who had accidentally fallen overboard. The learned trial judge recognized the existence of such a duty, but Mr. Justice Schroeder made no finding in this regard since he found that the duty owed by MacLaren in the present case was born of his having already embarked on the rescue of Matthews and being therefore bound to carry it through without negligence. I agree with the learned trial judge and Laskin J. that the duty was a pre-existing one arising out of Matthews' position as a guest and passenger. Whatever the origins of this duty may be, the finding of the learned trial judge that no breach of such duty either caused or contributed to the death of Matthews has not been questioned. The duty, if any, owing to the late Mr. Horsley stands on an entirely different footing. If, upon Matthews falling overboard, Horsley had immediately dived to his rescue and lost his life, as he ultimately did upon contact with the icy water, then I can see no conceivable basis on which the respondent could have been held responsible for his death. There is, however, no suggestion that there was any negligence in the rescue of Horsley and if the respondent is to be held liable to the appellants, such liability must in my view stem from a finding that the situation of peril brought about by Mat-thews falling into the water was thereafter, within the next three or four minutes, so aggravated by the negligence of MacLaren in attempting his rescue as to induce Horsley to risk his life by diving in after him. I think that the best description of the circumstances giving rise to the liability to a second rescuer such as Horsley is contained in the reasons for judgment of Lord Denning in Videan v. British Transport Commission[3], where he said, at p. 669: It seems to me that, if a person by his fault creates a situation of peril, he must answer for it to any person who attempts to rescue the person who is in danger. He owes a duty to such a person above all others. The rescuer may act instinctively out of humanity or deliberately out of courage. But whichever it is, so long as it is not wanton interference, if the rescuer is killed or injured in the at-tempt, he can recover damages from the one whose fault has been the cause of it. The italics are my own. In the present case a situation of peril was created when Matthews fell overboard, but it was not created by any fault on the part of MacLaren, and before MacLaren can be found to have been in any way responsible for Horsley's death, it must be found that there was such negligence in his method of rescue as to place Matthews in an apparent position of increased danger subsequent to and distinct from the danger to which he had been initially exposed by his accidental fall. In other words, any duty owing to Horsley must stem from the fact that a new situation of peril was created by MacLaren's negligence which induced Horsley to act as he did. In assessing MacLaren's conduct in attempting to rescue Matthews, I think it should be recognized that he was not under a duty to do more than take all reasonable steps which would have been likely to effect the rescue of a man who was alive and could take some action to assist himself. While there is no express finding that Matthews died upon contact with the icy water because his body was never found, there is nevertheless unanimous agreement amongst all those who saw him that he was from the moment he entered the water, inert and rigid with his torso out of the water, his arms outstretched and his eyes staring, and the learned trial judge reached the conclusion on the balance of probabilities that it had not been shown that his life could have been saved. The added difficulties in rescuing an inert body from the water as opposed to the body of a man who was alive and could assist himself do not need to be stressed, but as will hereafter appear, the difficulties entailed in retrieving a dead body undoubtedly increase the time involved in effecting its rescue. When the respondent's boat, the Ogopogo, left the dock at the Port Credit Yacht Club at about 6:30 p.m. on May 7, 1966, the only three passengers on deck were the late Mr. Matthews, who had been casting off the bow line and was seated on the port side of the foredeck, Richard Jones who was in the pilot's cockpit, and the respondent MacLaren who was at the helm. The weather was cool and a northwest wind was creating a light chop on Lake Ontario. As the boat proceeded away from the dock and after it had travelled about a mile into the broader waters of the lake, the wind increased and Matthews got up from his position in the bow and started to walk along the cat-walk on the port side of the vessel. As he did so he was holding onto a rail on the port side of the cabin top and in so doing he toppled over into the water. The clearest description of Matthews' fall is in my opinion that which was given by Jones who was called as a witness by the plaintiff and whose evidence appears to me to constitute the fullest account of the whole incident. Upon seeing the fall, Jones at once raised the cry: "Roly is overboard" and in describing the events which immediately followed he said: Q. Yes. And where was his body when you next observed it? A. It was on the starboard side possibly ten feet behind the stern, and‑ Q. Yes? A. -he seemed to be, you know, feet down, or at least he seemed to be up in the water. Q. And what if anything did MacLaren do with your words, 'Roly is overboard', or words to that effect; what did the boat do? A. Well, I didn't of course watch MacLaren, I was watching Mr. Matthews in the water. But MacLaren did put it into reverse. Now by that time Mr. Matthews would have been considerably further astern than when I first saw him. Q. How far astern? A. Well, I would say fifty feet. Q. Did Mr. MacLaren stop the engines at any time? A. Turn the key off? Q. Yes? A. No, no, he certainly didn't do it then. Q. No, I'm speaking to this particular point? A. No.... Q. At that particular point in location, did Mr. MacLaren turn the Ogopogo in any way, either to left or right, port or starboard? A. Not to any appreciable degree that I noticed. He didn't like, try to turn around or anything. Q. Yes. What did he do? A. Well, he reversed his motors and backed up on Mr. Matthews. Q. Yes. And could you describe how the boat approached Matthews in the water? A. Well, MacLaren was backing and reversing it on the two engines, which would be the normal-it was a twin engine boat. Q. Yes? A. And he would be backing up on him, and he would be swerving the boat one way and another, I don't-it would be quite choppy to take it straight as a die. And I threw a life-ring to Mr. Matthews just as soon as I could. On cross-examination Mr. Jones continued: Q. And you said that you threw a life-ring at him, is that correct? A. I threw the life-ring when we were about, oh, maybe thirty feet away from him, which landed in front. I think I couldn't throw it far enough. Q. Had the boat stopped at that time? A. No, no, no, but my‑ Q. Was Mr. MacLaren backing it up? A. He was backing it up, and then when we got much closer, I threw one of the life-jackets and it was right in front of him. Q. Right in front of him? A. Yes, under his nose almost. Q. Was it touching him? A. Oh no, I didn't aim to hit him, I just wanted to put it close and very definitely it landed right in front of his face, right in front of his body. Q. Well, how many inches or feet? A. Well no more than six inches or a foot. Q. Six inches or a foot away? A. Yes. Q. And is it your opinion that it was within his reach? A. Yes, most assuredly, yes. Q. And he didn't grab it? A. No. When Jones cried out "Roly is overboard" those in the cabin were immediatelyalerted. Mr. Marck, who was one of the guests, rushed to the stern and picked up a pike pole, Mrs. MacLaren started to pass up the life-jackets and Horsley and Mrs. Jones came up and were standing by in the cockpit. Reconstructing the events from the evidence of those who were actually at the scene, it appears to me that MacLaren was first alerted to Matthews' fall when the body was only about a boat-length and a half behind him. He put the engines momentarily in neutral and as soon as he saw the body he reversed, almost immediately after which Jones threw a life-ring within ten feet of the man in the water. As the boat got closer to the body, the side of the transom astern obscured MacLaren's view and when he was with-in four or five feet of the body he says that he turned the engines off, although Jones' evidence is that he shifted to neutral. In any event, this action was obviously taken to obviate the possibility of the propellers contacting the body and the effect was that the boat at first drifted closer to Matthews and was then carried away by the wind to a distance which is estimated at ten feet. Just before the gust of wind carried the boat to port, Marck had the pike pole within Matthews' reach if he had been able to grab it. This latter incident is described by MacLaren where he says: Q. When you shut the engines off, did you consider the weather at that time? A. No, I thought I had enough way on that I would drift on to him. Q. How far did you-you drifted away? A. We drifted up somewhat until she ran out of way, and Don almost got a hook on him. Q. Yes? A. Had Roly been able to help himself, he certainly-he could have grabbed it, it was so close to him. Q. Yes? A. Then the boat pivoted. Having considered the evidence of Jones, Mac-Laren, Marck and Mrs. Jones, I am satisfied that Matthews' body had been in the water for a little less than two minutes when Marck first had the pike pole within his grasp and a life-jacket thrown by Jones was within six inches of him. After the boat started to drift away, the subsequent efforts to rescue Matthews by reversing engines and coming stern on towards him had been in progress for another minute or two and the boat was within two or three feet when Hors-ley dove in surfacing about ten feet beyond the body. Horsley's dive was followed almost immediately by that of Mrs. Jones, but as she hit the water the body of Matthews disappeared. The medical evidence established that Horsley, after his body had been recovered had no sign of water in his lungs, and that he did not die by drowning but rather from shock sustained on contact with the icy water. Mrs. Jones was rescued after her husband had taken the helm and brought the boat bow on towards her. The finding of the learned trial judge that Mac-Laren was negligent in the rescue of Matthews is really twofold. On the one hand he finds that there was a failure to comply with the "man overboard" rescue procedure recommended by two experts called for the plaintiff, and on the other hand he concludes that MacLaren "was unable to exercise proper judgment in the emergency created because of his excessive consumption of alcohol." In the course of his reasons for judgment in the Court of Appeal, Mr. Justice Schroeder expressly found that there was nothing in the evidence to support the view that Mac-Laren was incapable of proper management and control owing to the consumption of liquor, the question was not seriously argued in this Court, and like my brother Laskin, I do not think there is any ground for saying that intoxicants had anything to do with the fatal occurrences. Mr. Justice Lacourciere's finding as to failure to follow the procedure recommended by experts was phrased as follows4[4] I can only conclude that the defendant's adoption of the wrong procedure in the circumstances was negligent, being a failure to exercise the reasonable care that the ordinary, prudent, reasonable opera-tor would have shown in effecting the "man over-board" rescue. The defendant in his evidence admitted that he made what he described as an error of judgment and did not attempt to justify the rescue procedure adopted. The procedure recommended by the experts in such circumstances was to bring the boat bow on towards the body and the witness Mumford, who had written a "boating course" for the Canadian Boating Federation and had considerable experience in small boats, testified that "it would take about two minutes to turn the boat around and come back on him and have him alongside, and possibly another twenty-five, thirty seconds to get him on the boat." The other expert, Livingstone, took the view that by using the bow-on procedure it would take a maximum of two minutes to effect the rescue. Neither of these experts was present at the time of the accident nor, as far as the record speaks, had either of them been at the helm of a twin-engine motor-cruiser when a cry was raised that a man was overboard, and it was seen that his body was only a boat-length and a half astern. In fact it does not appear from the record that either ex-pert had ever had the experience of being faced with the sudden responsibility to which this circumstance gave rise, and although they no doubt gave an accurate account of the most highly recommended method of effecting a rescue, their evidence appears to me to be unrelated to the critical position in which MacLaren found him-self. In this regard I am in complete agreement with the finding of Mr. Justice Schroeder where he says[5]: In my respectful opinion the evidence of the two experts spells out a standard of text-book perfection given at a time when all the evidence had been sifted and all the facts ascertained in the calm and deliberate atmosphere of a judicial investigation. It is ever so easy to be wise after the event and to state ex post facto that the conduct of the appellant, who had to rely upon the co-operation of the other passengers in effecting the rescue of Matthews, fell short of the standard of reasonableness. He is surely entitled to be judged in the light of the situation as it appeared to him at the time and in the context of immediate and pressing emergency, even if a duty of using reasonable care in effecting the rescue of Matthews was properly cast upon him. The learned trial Judge excused the conduct of Horsley in the light of the emergency but failed to apply the same test to the appellant whose problems and responsibilities were much greater and more complex. The excitement created by the cry "Roly's overboard", the fact that the appellant had to act immediately, the confusion attendant upon the suddenness of the tragic occurrence, the lack of time and opportunity for mature consideration, all these circumstances must be taken into account in approaching a determination of whether the appellant was guilty of negligence in backing the vessel towards Matthews instead of proceeding towards him "bow on", assuming that the standard contended for is applicable. It is true that on cross-examination Mr. Mac-Laren agreed that the first recommended method of rescue is to come around in a circle and put the man on your lee, but he also says that it is possible to come stern on towards the body with a twin-screw boat and that he had practised this method and thought it would be the best under the circumstances which faced him. He says quite frankly: "... I felt the quickest way out of it-I had my eye on him-I felt the quickest way was straight back. This could have been an error in judgment, I don't know. But I thought this was the best way." I am also in agreement with Mr. Justice Schroeder's comments on the procedure followed by MacLaren when he says, at p. 495: Of even greater significance is the question as to whether it has been proven that the manoeuvre undertaken by MacLaren actually prolonged the time within which the point was reached where a successful attempt could have been made. The manoeuvre recommended by the experts would have taken two minutes or more, whereas the approximate time from the moment that Matthews fell overboard until his body disappeared beneath the boat was three or four minutes. Whatever may be said in criticism of MacLaren's conduct, his efforts at rescue cannot be said to have worsened Matthews' condition. Moreover, when the boat was first reversed and brought to a stop, a lifejacket was thrown to Matthews who could have grasped it had he not then lost consciousness. As I have indicated, the evidence discloses that the boat was first brought to a stop in a maximum of two minutes after the body was sighted and at that time there was not only a life-jacket but a pike pole within Matthews' grasp had he been conscious. I share the view expressed by my brother Laskin when he says, in the course of his reasons for judgment, that: Encouragement by the common law of the rescue of persons in danger would, in my opinion, go beyond reasonable bounds if it involved liability of one rescuer to a succeeding one where the former has not been guilty of any fault which could be said to have induced a second rescue attempt. In the present case, however, although the procedure followed by MacLaren was not the most highly recommended one, I do not think that the evidence justifies the finding that any fault of his induced Horsley to risk his life by diving as he did. In this regard I adopt the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Schroeder in the penultimate paragraph of his reasons for judgment where he says : ...if the appellant erred in backing instead of turning the cruiser and proceeding towards Matthews "bow on", the error was one of judgment and not negligence, and in the existing circumstances of emergency ought fairly to be excused. I think it should be made clear that in my opinion the duty to rescue a man who has fallen accidentally overboard is a common law duty the existence of which is in no way dependent upon the provisions of s. 526(1) of the Canada Ship-ping Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 29. I should also say that, unlike Mr. Justice Jessup, the failure of Horsley to heed MacLaren's warning to remain in the cockpit or cabin plays no part in my reasoning. For all these reasons I would dismiss this appeal with costs. The judgment of Hall and Laskin H. was delivered by LASKIN J. (dissenting)-On a cool evening in early May, 1966, an invited guest on board a cabin cruiser, which was on its way to its home port, Oakville, from Port Credit, accidentally fell into the lake. In the course of rescue operations, another invited guest dived into the water to help him. The effort was without avail. The rescuer was pulled from the water by others on board, could not be resuscitated and was later pronounced dead. The body of the rescuee was never recovered. These are the bare bones of two fatal accident actions brought against the boat owner, who was in charge of his craft at the time, for the benefit of the widows and de-pendants of the two deceased. The rescuer's family succeeded at the trial but their claim was dismissed on appeal, and they now seek restoration by this Court of the favourable trial judgment. The other claim failed at trial and was not pursued farther. Various theories of the liability of the boat owner MacLaren were explored at trial and on appeal. Lacourciere J. founded himself on the following conclusions : (1) MacLaren was under a duty to aid the passenger Matthews who had accidentally fallen overboard and, in any event, he had affirmatively undertaken to effect a rescue; (2) he was negligent in the way in which he attempted the rescue; (3) he thus induced the rescuer Horsley to court the danger of effecting a rescue and was, accordingly, liable for the resulting injury and damage; (4) there was no contributory negligence on Horsley's part, nor any voluntary assumption of the risk created by MacLaren's negligence. In the Ontario Court of Appeal, Schroeder J.A., with whom McGillivray J.A. agreed, took as his starting point that whether or not there was a legal duty on MacLaren to come to the aid of Matthews, he did take steps to effect a rescue. The learned justice went on to say that even if, in these circumstances, a duty of using reasonable care rested on MacLaren the standard must be fixed in the light of the "immediate and pressing emergency"; and, moreover, the applicable principle was that liability would not be visited upon MacLaren if his efforts at rescue, although falling short of the required standard of care, did not worsen Matthews condition so as to induce Horsley to attempt a rescue. Schroeder J.A. concluded that MacLaren's efforts at rescue did not worsen Matthews' condition. He rejected the contention that there could be any liability upon MacLaren in respect of Horsley, arising out of the failure to carry out with due care a supposed duty to rescue Matthews, when he did not originally imperil Matthews. To charge MacLaren with foreseeability of Horsley's intervention in such circumstances would be, according to Schroeder J.A., an unwarranted extension of the principles found in the rescue cases. Re-turning to his starting point, the learned justice concluded that the evidence did not support a finding that anything done or left undone by MacLaren caused his rescue efforts to fail; and if he erred in the procedures he followed, the error was an excusable error of judgment and did not amount to negligence. Jessup J.A. came to the same exonerating result but on quite a narrow ground. He endorsed the view of the trial judge that there was a legal duty upon the master of a ship to aid a passenger who had fallen overboard, as being a duty of aid against perils of the sea. Again, there was a legal duty to avoid frustrating rescue by negligence in rendering assistance. MacLaren should have foreseen that by reason of his negligence in prolonging Matthews exposure to drowning, a rescue would be attempted by one of those on board. However, MacLaren had earlier warned Horsley to stay in the cockpit or cabin, and hence, in the opinion of Jessup J.A., he could not reasonably contemplate that Horsley would be a rescuer. Consequently, MacLaren was not under any liability for the death of Horsley. It is evident that the trial judge and Jessup J.A. see the law, as it is reflected in the rescue cases, differently from Schroeder and McGillivray M.A. But it is also apparent that, on the law as pro-pounded both by the trial judge and by Jessup J.A., Schroeder J.A. (McGillivray J.A. agreeing) could find no breach of legal duty to inculpate MacLaren. I do not read the learned Justice of Appeal as saying that if there was a breach of legal duty, the ensuing death of Horsley did not result from that breach. The facts, as found by the trial judge and as repeated with some variations by the Court of Appeal, are, with some additions from the record, as follows. MacLaren was the owner of a 30-foot six inch cabin cruiser, powered by two inboard 100 h.p. engines driving two propellers. On May 7, the day of the double tragedy, he had his wife on board and five guests, including Matthews and Horsley, one Donald Marck and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jones. The party had left Oakville in the afternoon and the boat was apparently the first to dock at the Port Credit Yacht Club that season. There was beer aboard the boat and some champagne was drunk at the Port Credit Yacht Club but there is no ground for saying that in-toxicants had anything to do with the fatal occurrences. The boat left Port Credit at about 6.30 p.m. to return to Oakville and the defendant was at the helm, proceeding at a speed of 10 to 12 knots in cool weather and with a northwest wind which created a light chop on Lake Ontario. Matthews had looked after the bow line when the boat left Port Credit, and was sitting on the port side of the foredeck. Jones was in the pilot's cockpit, and the other four passengers were in the cabin below. Jones saw Matthews rise and proceed toward the stern along a narrow cat-walk on the port side, holding on to the rail with his back to the water. On reaching the windscreen in front of the cockpit he toppled over backwards into the water. Jones immediately shouted "Roly's overboard". MacLaren, who was then going about 11 knots per hour, put the controls into neutral, and, leaning back, he could see Matthews about 40 to 50 feet astern to starboard, floating with head and shoulders out of the water. He put the boat in reverse, backing towards Matthews after pinning the control wheel with his stomach. He lost sight of Matthews because of the height and angle of the transom, and shut off the engines. He believed he had drifted to four or five feet of Matthews and wished to manoeuvre to get him at the rear gate on the starboard side. Jones had, in the mean-time, thrown a life-ring from the stern which landed about ten feet in front of Matthews, and Marck who was also at the stern tried to hook Matthews with a six-foot pike pole. He could not succeed because, with the engines shut down, the boat drifted away to a distance of ten to twenty feet. Matthews was seen at the time still floating, but with eyes open and staring and apparently unconscious. Jones threw a second life-jacket which fell on top of Matthews or near him but he made no effort to seize it. The water that day was extremely cold, with a surface temperature of about 44 degrees or less. MacLaren restarted his engines and again backed his boat towards Matthews. Three or four minutes had passed since the fall overboard, and it was then, with the boat moving, that Horsley, after taking off his shoes and trousers, dived into the water from the stern, coming up about ten feet from Matthews. According to Jones, the boat was drifting on to Matthews or Matthews was drifting towards the boat, and they were about three feet from each other when Horsley began to take off his shoes and trousers and then dived in to effect a rescue. Matthews was seen to fall forward, face and head in the water, and Mrs. Jones jumped in, one foot away, to hold up his head but Matthews disappeared under the star-board side of the boat. Jones, having seen his wife in the water, grabbed the boat controls which MacLaren yielded, swung the boat around bow on, and approached his wife on the star-board side where MacLaren and Marck, with Jones assisting, pulled her in. MacLaren then resumed control and went forward towards Horsley who was then also pulled in but in unconscious condition. Attempts at resuscitation failed. Medical opinion ascribed his death to sudden shock as a result of the immersion. The passengers who were in the cabin came up when MacLaren began to back up after the shout of "Roly's overboard". Jones went to the stern where he was joined by Marck and Horsley. In answer to a question whether he was in a panic, MacLaren said he thought he was in control of the situation. He had cut his engines after backing up towards Matthews because he knew of the danger to Matthews from the propellers. How-ever, in allowing the boat to drift, there was the effect of the wind to contend with. MacLaren testified that he had had a lifelong interest in boats. He was 48 years of age when the accident happened, had built a sail boat when he was aged 16, had bought a small outboard cruiser in the late fifties, and later bought a larger 42-foot twin-engined cruiser which he traded in 1964 for the boat on which the fatal cruise was taken. It was an easily manoeuvrable boat which could be turned almost in its own length. Mac-Laren said he operated it "quite a bit-it's my hobby". He had practised rescue operations and was aware that the first recommended method was to come bow on in a circle and approach the person in the water on the lee. In the present case, although he knew that he could not back up very fast if he was to control his boat, he felt that backing up would be the quickest way to reach Matthews. However, it took him about two minutes to get near to Matthews on his first try. Evidence on proper rescue procedures to reach a person overboard was given by one Captain Livingstone, a qualified sea captain who was in charge of a marine school which trained persons in seamanship, and by a Captain Mumford, also so qualified, who was with the Toronto Harbour Commission as its communications officer. Their testimony was that the quickest and safest way to effect a rescue was to circle if necessary and come bow on to the person in the water. There was more control over the boat in this way, both in respect of manoeuvrability and speed, and danger from propellers was avoided. The witnesses agreed that there could be circumstances, such as being obliged to manoeuvre in a crowded area, when backing up would be appropriate. It was their opinion, however, that coming bow on was standard procedure for boat operators. There was no evidence to contradict this testimony, and, indeed, MacLaren himself confirmed that "bow on" was the preferred rescue procedure. Jones, who had boating experience, testified on this point in relation to the rescue of his wife. It was his evidence that he took the controls from MacLaren because he felt that the backing-up procedure would not be effective; hence he came towards his wife bow on. In this Court, counsel for the appellants relied on three alternative bases of liability. There was, first, the submission that in going to the aid of Matthews, as he did, MacLaren came under a duty to carry out the rescue with due care in the circumstances, and his failure to employ standard rescue procedures foreseeably brought Horsley into the picture with the ensuing fatal result. The second basis of liability was doubly founded as resting (a) on a common law duty of care of a private carrier to his passengers, involving a duty to come to the aid of a passenger who has accidentally fallen overboard, or (b) on a statutory duty under s. 526(1) of the Canada Shipping Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 29, to come to the aid of a passenger who has fallen over-board. There was failure, so the allegation was, to act reasonably in carrying out these duties or either of them, with the foreseeable consequence of Horsley's encounter of danger. The third contention was the broadest, to the effect that where a situation of peril, albeit not brought about originally by the defendant's negligence, arises by reason of the defendant's attempt at rescue, he is liable to a second rescuer for ensuing dam-age on the ground that the latter's intervention is reasonably foreseeable. None of the bases of liability advanced by the appellants is strictly within the original principle on which the "rescue" cases were founded. That was the recognition of a duty by a negligent defendant to a rescuer coming to the aid of the person imperilled by the defendant's negligence. The evolution of the law on this subject, originating in the moral approbation of assistance to a person in peril, involved a break with the "mind your own business" philosophy. Legal protection is now afforded to one who risks in-jury to himself in going to the rescue of another who has been foreseeably exposed to danger by the unreasonable conduct of a third person. The latter is now subject to liability at the suit of the rescuer as well as at the suit of the emperilled person, provided, in the case of the rescuer, that his intervention was not so utterly foolhardy as to be outside of any accountable risk and thus beyond even contributory negligence. Moreover, the liability to the rescuer, although founded on the concept of duty, is now seen as stemming from an independent and not a derivative duty of the negligent person. As Fleming on Torts, 3rd ed., 1965, has put it (at p. 166), the cause of action of the rescuer in arising out of the defendant's negligence, is based "not in its tendency to imperil the person rescued, but in its tendency to induce the rescuer to encounter the danger. Thus viewed, the duty to the rescuer is clearly independent ...". This explanation of principle was put forward as early as 1924 by Professor Bohlen (see his Studies in the Law of Torts, at p. 569) in recognition of the difficulty of straining the notion of foreseeability to em-brace a rescuer of a person imperilled by an-other's negligence. Under this explanation of the basis of liability, it is immaterial that the imperilled person does not in fact suffer any injury or that, as it turns out, the negligent per-son was under no liability to him either because the injury was not caused by the negligence or the damage was outside the foreseeable risk of harm to him: cf. Videan v. British Transport Commission[6]. It is a further consequence of the recognition of an independent duty that a person who imperils himself by his carelessness may be as fully liable to a rescuer as a third person would be who imperils another. In my opinion, therefore, Dupuis v. New Regina Trading Co. Ltd.[7], ought no longer to be taken as a statement of the common law in Canada in so far as it denies recovery because the rescuer was injured in going to the aid of a person who imperilled himself. The doctrinal issues are sufficiently canvassed by the late Dean Wright in (1943), 21 Can. Bar Rev. 758; and see also Ward v. T. E. Hopkins & Son, Ltd.; Baker v. T. E. Hopkins & Son, Ltd.[8] I realize that this statement of the law invites the conclusion that Horsley's estate might succeed against that of Matthews if it was proved that Matthews acted without proper care for his own safety so that Horsley was prompted to come to his rescue. This issue does not, how-ever, have to be canvassed in these proceedings °. " since the estate of Matthews was not joined as a co-defendant. The thinking behind the rescue cases, in so far as they have translated a moral impulse into a legally protectible interest, suggests that liability to a rescuer should not depend on whether there was original negligence which created the peril and which, therefore, prompted the rescue effort. It would appear that the principle should be equally applicable if, at any stage of the perilous situation, there was negligence on the defendant's part which induced the rescuer to attempt the rescue or which operated against him after he had made the attempt. If this be so, it indicates the possibility of an action by a second rescuer against
Source: decisions.scc-csc.ca