Proper construction
46 The competing contentions of the parties tended to state the relevant issue as a single question of construction as to what was required to be stated in a notice (such as the Notice) concerning the timing of proposed activities. However, in my view, it is necessary to bear in mind the separate character of each of the notification requirement and the objection requirement as specified in the Code.
47 Dealing first with the objection requirement, given the nature of the right to object and the manner in which the Code specifies the time within which an objection must be made, the Code provisions concerning the making of an objection implicitly require notice to be given of the proposed activities in a manner that specifies the earliest date on which the carrier proposes to undertake the activities. In my view, such a requirement is implicit in the terms of cl 4.26(1)(b), read in the context of the subsequent provisions in cl 4.29 to cl 4.34. In short, the Code requirements to specify in any notice the arrangements for making an objection and to allow an objection to be made up to five days before the proposed activity are requirements that cannot be met without making plain in the notice the earliest date of the proposed activities. If there is no date specified, the notice fails to inform the recipient of the time for making an objection, being a key aspect of the arrangements for making an objection.
48 The alternative would be for notice to be given explaining the procedure for objection, but then leaving for some type of separate, perhaps informal, communication as to when the activities are proposed. By that separate communication the time within which an objection may be made would then be established and an objection could be made on that basis. However, such a construction would contemplate an additional form of notification that is not indicated by the Code. Further, as submitted for the Owners, it would introduce confusion as to the date from which the period for making an objection was to run. As such, it would be inconsistent with the evident purpose of the objection notification which is to ensure that an owner receiving a notice is told of the right to object and how to exercise that right. It would compromise such a purpose if the owner was told that the objection had to be made at least five business days before the proposed activity, but then was not told when the activity was proposed.
49 Therefore, taking account of the evident purpose, the objection requirement of the Code required the Notice to state the earliest date on which the proposed activities may be undertaken.
50 As a matter of practicality, there is no reason why the notice might not also specify an end date (as was done in the present case). However, there appears to be no statutory requirement to do so. What the Code requires in terms of the objection is that the notice specify a date after which the activities are proposed to be undertaken. Then, if there is no objection, the activities may be undertaken. The notice need not specify the precise date on which the activities will be undertaken such that a fresh notice is required if there is a short delay for some reason. The Code is concerned with making the owner aware of the proposed activities well before they happen and allowing for an objection before they are undertaken.
51 It was submitted that the fact that one of the reasons that an owner may object was the date when the carrier proposes to start the activity or stop it meant that the end date had to be specified. However, a notice that specified a start date would still allow such an objection to be made. The fact that no end date was specified would mean that it was unclear when the proposed activities would end and that could itself be a basis for objection because it would mean the carrier could stop the activity on an uncertain future date of its own choosing.
52 If no end date is specified, a point may be reached where the notice is stale and a fresh notice is required because the passage of time indicates that the carrier does not intend to act on the notice or sufficient time has passed that the notice, if acted upon, may apply to a different set of circumstances in respect of which the owner should have an opportunity to raise an objection. For those reasons, a carrier may find it prudent to specify an end date to be clear as to the window within which it is proposed to undertake the activities. However, in my view, there is no requirement for an end date to be specified.
53 The possibility that the date on which the activities may be undertaken could be later than the date specified in the notice is also consistent with those aspects of the Code that contemplate that if there is an objection then it may concern the dates on which the works may be undertaken and the requirement that the carrier make a reasonable effort to reach agreement (which might be agreement to defer the activities until a time that is more convenient for the owner). There is no provision in the Code suggesting that in such a case the activities can only proceed if there is a fresh notice.
54 Therefore, even though the notice required by Schedule 3 (as repeated in the Code) only requires notice to be given 10 days before actually engaging in the activity (without specifying when the activity will commence), the inclusion of the objection regime in the Code requires the notice to specify when the activity is proposed to commence in order to meet the obligation to include in the notice information about the arrangements for making an objection. As the Code requires any objection to be made five business days before the proposed activities, the earliest commencement date of those proposed activities must be included as part of the information about the arrangements for making an objection.
55 Further, although Schedule 3 and the Code did not require the Notice to specify when the activities would be undertaken in order to meet the notification requirement, the Code contemplated that the carrier would meet both requirements. That is to say, the proposed date for commencement of the activities that had to be specified to the meet the objection requirement also had to be a date that met the 10 business days' notification requirement. This is the consequence of a contextual construction of the Code requiring an owner to meet both requirements. The Code contemplated that an owner would receive 10 business days' notice before any activities would be undertaken. Therefore, the proposed date for commencement of activities that established the time within which to object could not be a date that was inconsistent with that requirement.
56 For reasons already given, a construction of the Code requirements that gave significance to a date that was to be found outside the terms of the notice would be impractical. Therefore, in order for the proposed date for commencement of the activities to meet the objection requirement it had to be a date that was no earlier than 10 business days after the actual or deemed date of service of the notice.