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England and Wales High Court (Admiralty Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Admiralty Division) Decisions >> Alize 1954 & Anor v Allianz Elementar Versicherungs AG & Ors [2019] EWHC 481 (Admlty) (08 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admlty/2019/481.html Cite as: [2019] 1 Lloyd's Rep 595, [2019] Bus LR 1453, [2019] 2 All ER (Comm) 679, [2019] WLR(D) 150, [2019] EWHC 481 (Admlty) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMIRALTY COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) ALIZE 1954 (2) CMA CGM SA |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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ALLIANZ ELEMENTAR VERSICHERUNGS AG AND OTHERS |
Defendants |
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John Russell QC (instructed by Clyde and Co.) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 28-31 January, 1 and 6 February 2019 with further written submissions exchanged until 22 February 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
The witnesses
The vessel
The port of Xiamen
"Captains have to be aware that the Xiamen waters are difficult waters because of traffic, weather conditions, currents, shallow waters, narrow channel, later inner water pilotage and weak traffic organisation………………We want to draw your attention that sailing Xiamen waters and more generally speaking Chinese waters should be done with utmost care and diligent caution………"
"it was well known within CMA [the Owners] that Xiamen was a difficult port to navigate in and out of."
"it is a particular feature of that port [Xiamen] that there may be uncharted shallows outside the fairway" and that "that is something that was specifically known to CMA before this grounding."
The grounding position
The passage plan
The vessel's navigation
Approaching the buoy no. 14-1 I decided to leave it in Port side (because upon arrival in Xiamen the day before, north-west bound, the VTS warned me that there is shallow water ahead on the East of the channel). When I tried to re-enter the channel today, nearby Buoy 14-1, the vessel was steering with difficulty due to the deep draught and with trim zero. I noticed that the vessel is not responding fast enough to come back to port and in order to avoid the awash rocks ahead I tried to go ahead and remain west of the Jiujia rocks, to follow a route outside the channel as the chart was showing depths of 40-35 metres ahead, with the intention to rejoin the channel after that.
"…..as we passed No.15 Buoy a minute or so later I considered my options about what distance to pass off No.14-1 Buoy just over a mile ahead of us. I recalled the incident inward bound when the VTS called us warning that we were running into shallow water to the north east of the fairway above No.14-1 Buoy. I was reluctant to head up into that area again to clear the stony patch around No.14-1 Buoy and so considered leaving that buoy instead to port where there was about 30 metres of water. Although this meant I would leave the fairway briefly there looked to be plenty of water for me to rejoin the fairway between Nos 14-1 and 14 Buoys. I therefore ordered the helm to starboard to put No.14-1 Buoy on our port bow".
Actionable fault and the burden of proof
The criticisms of the passage plan
"Passage planning is not science. There is inevitably an element of judgment as to what annotations need to be added to the chart (or recorded elsewhere)."
Unseaworthiness
Causation
Due diligence
"The carrier shall be bound, before and at the beginning of the voyage, to exercise due diligence to –
(a) make the ship seaworthy ……"
"Neither the carrier nor the ship shall be liable for loss or damage arising or resulting from unseaworthiness unless caused by want of due diligence on the part of the carrier to make the ship seaworthy…in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 1 of Article III.
Whenever loss or damage has resulted from unseaworthiness, the burden of proving the exercise of due diligence shall be on the carrier or other person claiming exemption under this Article."
"The due diligence required is due diligence in the work itself by the carrier and all persons, whether servants or agents or independent contractors whom he employs or engages in the task of making the ship seaworthy; the carrier does not therefore discharge the burden of proving that due diligence has been exercised by proof that he engaged competent experts to perform and supervise the ask of making the ship seaworthy. The statute imposes an inescapable personal obligation."
"130. The duty of "due diligence" is an "inescapable personal obligation" (Scrutton on Charterparties (20th ed.), p. 429); it is non-delegable. The carrier will therefore be responsible for negligence of those to whom it delegates due diligence. The question is whether unseaworthiness is due to any lack of diligence in those who have been implicated by the carrier in the work of keeping or making the vessel seaworthy. Such persons are the carriers' agents whose diligence or lack of it is attributable to the carrier: The Muncaster Castle, [1961] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 57 at p. 82; [1961] A.C. 807 at p. 862 per Lord Radcliffe. See also Viscount Simonds at pp. 70-71; pp. 843-844. This principle is relevant in two respects: (1) the carrier under the bills of lading is liable for the want of due diligence by the owners or managers (The Fjord Wind, [1999] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 307 at p. 315 and Carver on Bills of Lading (1st ed.), par. 9-125); (2) the carrier is liable for the want of due diligence of the master insofar as the carrier or the owners or managers have delegated to him their duties as to seaworthiness.
131. The exercise of due diligence is equivalent to the exercise of reasonable care and skill: "Lack of due diligence is negligence; and what is in issue in this case is whether there was an error of judgment that amounted to professional negligence." (The Amstelslot, [1963] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 223 at p. 235 per Lord Devlin.) See also: Scrutton on Charterparties (20th ed.), p. 429: "The standard imposed by the obligation to exercise due diligence appears to be equivalent to that of the common law duty of care."
"In my view there is no warrant on the facts of those cases or the rationes of them for extending a carrier's duty of due diligence as to the structure and stowage of its ship to a physical verification of the declared contents of containers or other packaging in which cargo is shipped unless put on notice to do so."
"Those responsible for the manufacture, stuffing and shipping of containers are plainly not carrying out any part of the carrier's function for which he should be held responsible."
"It is well recognised and has been since 1984 (following developments in the law relating to the limitation of shipowners' liabilities between 1960 and 1984) that shipowners themselves owe a duty to ensure the safe and efficient management of their vessels; see, for example, The Marion [1984] 2 Lloyd's Reports 1 at p.4 per Lord Brandon. That duty cannot be discharged by relying upon the master or chief engineer to exercise their own duty to ensure the safe and efficient management of their vessel. The ISM Code, pursuant to which all shipowners must have an SMS, reflects the shipowners' own duty."
NM 6274(P)/10 not on board; working chart not corrected
Working chart not updated to show NM 1691 corrections
No official electronic charts on board showing the shoal on which the vessel grounded
Bridge management
Incompetence of the master
Fatigue
Deviation
"A mere departure or failure to follow the contract voyage or route is not necessarily a deviation, or every stranding which occurred in the course of a voyage would be a deviation, because the voyage contracted for, I imagine, is in no case one which essentially involves the necessity of stranding. It is a change of voyage, a radical breach of the contract, that is required to, and essentially does, constitute a deviation."
"…the master never intended to leave the route of the voyage……What he did was to make a mistake as to the compass course which was necessary to take him from the terminus a quo to the terminus ad quem. To use an analogy …. He did not adopt another road instead of the road that he had agreed to take, but he got himself into the ditch at the side of the road which he was intending to follow. He was not on another route; he was on the existing route, although he was out of the proper part of the route which he ought to have followed."
Conclusion
Note 1 The Admiralty Court has much experience of dealing with issues of passage planning and navigation in collision cases, assisted by advice from nautical assessors from Trinity House. There does not seem to be any reason why the court could not deal with such issues in the same way when they arise in a general average case resulting from the grounding of a vessel. I mention that so that parties may consider that possibility in any future general average arising from a grounding. Such a course may be particularly appropriate where, as here, the amount in dispute is, in relative terms, modest.
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