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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Euro-Asian Oil SA v Credit Suisse AG & Ors [2018] EWCA Civ 1720 (25 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1720.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 1720 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
LORD JUSTICE SIMON
____________________
Euro-Asian Oil SA (formerly Euro-Asian Oil AG) |
Respondent/ Cross-Appellant (Claimant) |
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and |
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Credit Suisse AG |
Appellant/ Cross-Respondent (Defendant) |
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and |
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Abilo (UK) Ltd |
Second Respondent (Third Party)) |
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and |
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Mr Dan Igniska |
Fourth party |
____________________
Mr Duncan Matthews QC and Mr Sudhanshu Swaroop QC (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the Respondent
The Second Respondent and Fourth Party did not appear
Hearing dates 15 and 16 May 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon:
Introduction
The fourth contract documents dated 1 October 2010
CIF one safe port/berth Constantza in one full cargo lot per M/T 'T.B.N' … during the period 10 September- 31 December 2010.
In the event that above listed documents No.2 through 6 are not available when payment becomes due, then payment shall be made against the presentation of the following documents:
1. Beneficiary's invoice …
2. Beneficiary's letter of indemnity as per following wording … countersigned by Credit Suisse AG Geneva.
6. Documents presented more than 21 days from bill of lading date but within documentary credit validity acceptable;
and a proviso:
This documentary credit is subject to the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits, 2007 revision, I.C.C. Publication Nr. 600 (UCP).
The prior history
The first sale transaction
This was not what [Euro-Asian] intended or expected. I also accept that they did not persist in their protests because they were reassured by the entry into the second transaction, which enabled Mr Igniska to retrieve the situation, but more importantly, as Mr Michailov said, by the fact that they received a holding certificate for the requisite quantity of gasoil.
The second and third sale transactions
221. Abilo delivered under the second sale contract product in tank at Constanza, by means of a holding certificate from the Constanza oil terminal dated 9 June 2010. There had been a discharge by the Histria Azure at Constanza around 6-7 June 2010 …
222. That holding certificate did not identify that the product derived from the Histria Azure. In chasing Mr Igniska for the holding certificate on 8 June 2010, Euro-Asian had stated that for 'obvious reasons' it should not mention the name of any vessel.
226. It is therefore clear that by the end of May [2010] Mr Michailov was aware of what he described as the carousel. In other words, Mr Igniska was presenting documents under letters of credit in respect of one cargo, which had already been discharged in Constanza, and using other gasoil and the holding certificate for it as a basis for a new transaction.
227. Nonetheless, Euro-Asian entered a further transaction. In evidence Mr Michailov said that he was prepared to run with it for another circle or two, until Mr Igniska extracted himself from his difficult situation, to avoid legal action and to resolve matters commercially.
We, the undersigned company Oil Terminal SA Constantza, Romania hereby declare that we hold the quantity of 22,000 metric tons Diesel 10 PPM ('the goods) being the property of Euro-Asian Oil AG and pledged in favour of BNP Paribas …
242. What Abilo delivered under the third sale contract was ULSD by in-tank holding certificate. The Ariadne had arrived at Constanza sometime after 30 September 2010 under bills of lading dated 10 September 2010 ...
The fourth sale transaction
The terms of the fourth letter of indemnity
[A] We refer to the cargo of 20,000 m/tons of ULSD (max 10ppm) shipped on board the MT Ariadne at Puerto la Cruz, pursuant to bills of lading dated 10.09.2010.
[B] Although we have sold and transferred title to the above named cargo to yourselves, we have been unable to provide you with the full set 3/3 original bills of lading issued or endorsed to the order of Credit Agricole (Suisse) SA Geneva and other shipping documents covering the said sale.
[C] In consideration of Credit Agricole (Suisse) SA, Geneva for account of Euro-Asian Oil AG, paying us, full purchase price of US dollars 15,844,840.00, we hereby expressly warrant that (i) we have marketable title free and clear of any lien or encumbrance to such material and that we have the full right and authority to (ii) transfer such title to you and (iii) effect delivery of the said cargo to you.
(D) We further agree to locate and surrender to you only, the full set of 3/3 original bills of lading issued or endorsed to the order of Credit Agricole (Suisse) SA, Geneva and other shipping documents and to protect, indemnify and hold you harmless from and against any and all damages, costs and expenses (including reasonable attorney fees) which you may suffer by reason of the shipping documents including the original clean and negotiable bills of lading remaining outstanding or by reason of a breach of the warranties given above, including but not limited to any claims and demands which may be made by a holder or transferee of any original bill of lading or by any other third party claiming an interest in or lien on the cargo, bills of lading or on the proceeds thereof.
(E) This letter of indemnity shall expire upon our tendering to the bank [Crédit Agricole] for your [Euro-Asian's] account the original shipping documents, including the full set of 3/3 original bill(s) of lading issued or endorsed to the order of Crédit Agricole (Suisse) SA, Geneva, as required under documentary credit ...
We, the undersigned Credit Suisse AG, Geneva, hereby agree to be jointly and severally obligated and bound by the above indemnity...
with a signature on behalf of Credit Suisse.
The presentation under the fourth letter of credit
The first issue
330. … in my view there is no basis in the evidence for the existence of the separate arrangements Credit Suisse alleged in either of the forms it was advanced. Nothing express in the nature of a separate arrangement was identified, be it the emails or the witness evidence. To the contrary there were the emphatic denials of Mr Michailov which, as I have indicated, I accept.
331. Further, there was the evidence that Euro-Asian considered that the four transactions would work as ordinary CIF contracts in the oil industry. The pattern envisaged by Euro-Asian was contained in the explanation Mr Duman gave to Crédit Agricole in his email of 26 November 2009. It spelt out that Euro-Asian would buy cargoes of 20-30,000 mt, delivery CIF Constanza, to be sold back to back to Real Oil.
333. None of the evidence which Credit Suisse advanced to support its case on separate arrangements in my judgment bears the weight suggested. Particular expressions in emails must be read in context and not interpreted with the benefit of hindsight.
The correct characterisation of the fourth contract
…
iv) In making his decisions the trial judge will have regard to the whole of the sea of evidence presented to him, whereas an appellate court will only be island hopping.
v) The atmosphere of the courtroom cannot, in any event, be recreated by reference to documents (including transcripts of evidence).
336. In my view, Euro-Asian was not a willing participant, as Credit Suisse suggested, in any separate arrangements. Mr Michailov and Mr Duman were eventually aware of the fate of the Dominia cargo and of what they called the carousel. Once they realized what Mr Igniska was doing was untoward they were especially vigilant in obtaining a holding certificate covering the same quantity of oil as contracted.
337. But this did not mean that they ever accepted or approved this way of performing the transactions. They continued with Abilo and Mr Igniska because there was no loss in the first three transactions. Their protection in each case was a holding certificate and that was why they were so anxious to obtain one in the first three transactions before presentation under the letters of credit.
338. Indeed it is difficult to see what opportunities Euro-Asian had to put a stop to Abilo's mis-performance of the transactions. Mr Michailov's explanations that he was giving Mr Igniska the opportunity to trade out of his difficulties, that he was avoiding legal action and wanting the situation to be resolved commercially, and that he was hoping that Mr Igniska would eventually 'close the circle', all ring true. The insertion of the Ariadne in the November 2010 commissions table must be seen against this background: Mr Igniska would ultimately close the circle, Mr Michailov hoped, perhaps but perhaps not, on this turn of the carousel. And of course, crucially, Euro-Asian could always fall back on letters of indemnity signed by Credit Suisse.
339. As to the commissions and other financial benefits which Mr Michailov and Mr Duman derived from the Abilo business, I accept Credit Suisse's submission that Mr Michailov and Mr Duman had been misleading about these and the true nature of their relationship with Mr Igniska. The financial benefits may have been a factor in not taking a stronger line with Mr Igniska and allowing the situation to run.
340. However, I do not accept that these personal financial benefits would ever have induced Mr Michailov (and Mr Duman) to enter the Credit Suisse type separate arrangements, with their grave attendant risk that Mr Igniska, as happened in the Fourth transaction, could present documents for payment when he had no cargo to supply. The commissions were small beer compared with the potential losses to their company and consequential repercussions for them.
Conclusion on the first issue
The second issue
Quantum
352. Quantum was dealt with in writing. Euro-Asian claimed the market value of 22,000 mt of ULSD (max 10ppm) in Constanza on or about 7 January 2011 against Abilo and Credit Suisse for breach of the Fourth letter of indemnity, and against Abilo for breach of the Fourth contract of sale. Euro-Asian and Credit Suisse agreed that this was US$18,360,320. Abilo and Mr Igniska took the market valuation date as at 13-17 September 2010.
353. In my judgment Euro-Asian's damages should be capped at US$15,889,500, the price which Euro-Asian invoiced Real Oil under the Fourth Real Oil contract. It was always contemplated that Euro-Asian would nominate the same cargo to perform the Real Oil contracts which Abilo had nominated to perform the sale contracts. The market value rule for damages for failure to deliver goods under section 51(3) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 is displaced.
(1) Where the seller wrongfully neglects or refuses to deliver the goods to the buyer, the buyer may maintain an action against the seller for damages for non-delivery.
(2) The measure of damages is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting, in the ordinary course of events, from the seller's breach of contract.
(3) Where there is an available market for the goods in question, the measure of damages is prima facie to be ascertained by the difference between the contract price and the market or current price of the goods at the time or times when they ought to have been delivered or (if no time was fixed) at the time of the refusal to deliver.
What was in the assumed contemplation of both parties acting as reasonable men in the light of the general and specific facts (as the case may be) known to both parties in regard to damages as a result of the breach of contract … each must be taken to understand the ordinary practices and exigencies of the other's trade …
It is well-settled that damages for non-delivery or delay in delivery of goods, where there is a market price, do not include damages for the loss of any particular contract unless that contract has been in the contemplation of the parties to the original contract: Horne v. Midland Railway Co (18730 LR 8 CP 131
I do not think that that claim can succeed, first, because there is no evidence that that measure of damage was contemplated by the parties. It is perfectly true that the defendants knew that the plaintiffs were merchants who had bought for re-sale, but everybody who sells to a merchant knows that he has bought for re-sale, and it does not, as I understand it, make any difference to the ordinary measure of damage where there is a market. What is contemplated is that the merchant buys for re-sale, but if the goods are not delivered to him he will go out into the market and buy similar goods and honour his contract in that way. If the market has fallen he has suffered no damage; if the market has risen the measure of damage is the difference in the market price. There are, of course, cases where that prima facie measure of damage is not applicable because something different is contemplated. If, for example, a man sells goods of special manufacture and it is known that they are to be re-sold, it must also be known that they cannot be bought in the market, being specially manufactured by the seller. In such a case the loss of profit becomes the appropriate measure of damage. Similarly, it may very well be that in the case of string contracts, if the seller knows that the merchant is not buying merely for re-sale generally, but upon a string contract where he will re-sell those specific goods and where he could only honour his contract by delivering those goods and no others, the measure of loss of profit on re-sale is the right measure.
In my judgment there is no evidence that the defendants had any knowledge that the plaintiffs intended to re-sell those very goods; indeed, I am not at all sure that the plaintiffs did intend to re-sell those very goods. I think that the highest that the case can be put is that the plaintiffs, if they did anything at all, appropriated those goods subsequently to the contract with Nam Hua. But there is no evidence that there was any system of string contracts; or that the defendants knew anything more than that the plaintiffs were buying for re-sale generally, and no evidence to show that it could ever have been contemplated that if the goods were not delivered it would be necessary for the plaintiffs to do anything except go out into the market and buy similar goods which would have taken their place.
Issue 3
363. In written submissions Credit Suisse contended that it is entitled to an indemnity from Abilo under the Fourth letter of credit. That, it submitted, was a matter of construction or implication regarding the fourth letter of indemnity. Given its knowledge and involvement in the transaction, it must always have contemplated that, should any breach of warranty or undertaking occur, it would be Abilo (via Mr Igniska) who would, as between Abilo and Credit Suisse, have the greater responsibility for any such breach. A passage in Vossloh Aktiengesellschaft v. Alpha Trains (UK) Limited [2010] EWHC 2443 (Ch) [25] was cited in support.
364. In my view it is not possible to reach this conclusion on ordinary principles of construction or of the implication of terms. On the face of the fourth letter of indemnity Credit Suisse assumed joint and several liability with Abilo. This may have been common practice in the industry to give comfort to a buyer but that cannot affect the liability between a seller and the co-signing bank. In effect the fourth letter of indemnity on its face stated that Credit Suisse was assuming the same contractual responsibilities as Abilo and I cannot find that as a matter of construction or implication there is a term requiring Abilo to indemnify Credit Suisse should Credit Suisse be liable to Euro-Asian.
365. However, Credit Suisse is entitled in my judgment to a contribution from Abilo under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 for the damages it must pay Euro-Asian. Credit Suisse seeks a one hundred percent contribution from Abilo having regard 'to considerations of relative causative potency as well as to comparative blameworthiness': see Chitty on Contracts, 32nd ed, para 17-034.
366. Earlier in the judgment I described the role of Credit Suisse. Abilo was their customer and the bank financed it by delaying presentation under what it regarded as tailor made arrangements and signing letters of indemnity regarding the situation as it was some months previously. On its own admission it was exposing itself to some risk. The reality was that in signing the letters of indemnity and acting in this way it was no longer a letter of credit bank.
367. In terms of the parties' comparative responsibility, however, it was Abilo (through Mr Igniska) which bears the major responsibility for Euro-Asian's loss. It was he who started the so-called carousel and, to continue with the Euro-Asian's terminology, it was he who never closed the circle. He kept what was happening from Credit Suisse, as explained earlier in the judgment.
368. In the result it seems to me that in terms of the parties' responsibility for the damage (see White Book, vol. 2, 9B-1092), Credit Suisse is entitled to a contribution from Abilo, one I assess at eighty percent.
In contrast to the contract of guarantee is the contract of indemnity. In one sense all contacts of guarantee (strictly so called) are contracts of indemnity (as indeed are many contracts of insurance) since, in its widest sense, an indemnity is an obligation imposed by operation of law or by agreement of the parties. In the narrower sense in which, in the current context, the expression occurs, a contract of indemnity denotes a contract where the person who gives the indemnity undertakes his indemnity obligation by way of security for the performance of an obligation by another. Its essential distinguishing feature is that, unlike a contract of guarantee (strictly so called), a primary liability falls upon the giver of the indemnity. Unless (as is quite possible) he has undertaken his liability jointly with the principal, his liability is wholly independent of any liability which may arise as between the principal and the creditor. It will usually be implicit in such an arrangement that as between the principal and the giver of the indemnity, the principal is to be primarily liable, so that if the indemnifier has to pay first he has a right of recourse against the principal. (It will not be so if, for example, the indemnifier has not undertaken his indemnity obligation at the request of the principal.) It is this feature which leads to the person giving the indemnity to be described as a 'surety' although, strictly, the contract of indemnity cannot itself be a contract of suretyship.
Conclusion
i) (first issue) Credit Suisse's appeal on its liability under the fourth letter of indemnity should be dismissed;
ii) (second issue) Euro-Asian's cross-appeal on the measure of damages should be dismissed; and
iii) (third issue) Credit Suisse's appeal on the extent of its indemnity against Abilo be allowed.
Lady Justice King:
Dame Elizabeth Gloster DBE: