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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Alphapoint Shipping Ltd v Rotem Amfert Negev Ltd & Anor [2004] EWHC 2232 (Comm) (08 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2004/2232.html Cite as: [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 23, [2004] EWHC 2232 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Alphapoint Shipping Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Rotem Amfert Negev Ltd" |
First Defendant |
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- and – |
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Dead Sea Works Ltd m v "AGIOS DIMITRIOS |
Second Defendant |
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Philip Riches (instructed by Holman Fenwick & Willan) for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Colman:
Clause 23 (b)
"At loading port(s) when tendering notice of readiness, Vessels' cargo holds and hatch covers shall be clean, dry of loose rust and otherwise ready and suitable to receive the intended cargo."
Clause 23 (c)
"If the vessel is found not ready in all respects to load/discharge and/or fails to pass inspection, the actual time lost from the discovery thereof until the Vessel is in fact ready to load/discharge shall not count as lay time. In case the Vessel is in berth the Charterers may order the Vessel to vacate the loading or discharging berth and all time thereby lost and any expense thereby incurred shall be for Owner's account. All the above is without prejudice to Charterers' rights to exercise their option to cancel the Charter Party as per clause 9"
Clause 25 (Twelve)
"Crew and mechanical failure – time lost at loading and/or discharging port(s) which can be reasonably attributed to crew and/or ship's mechanical failure, shall not be counted as laytime or time on demurrage. Any extra expenses incurred thereof to be borne by the Owners."
The Shipowners' submissions
62. With regard to the final- the second – point, there was no doubt that the "VANA" took advantage of the problems aboard the "AGIOS DIMITRIOS" to slip alongside and to use the vacant loading facilities. The owners contended that the "VANA" was chartered by the same charterers and invited disclosure to that effect. This was not denied by the charterers although we had in mind that two charterers were involved in the "AGIOS DIMITRIOS" shipment - Rotem Amfert and Dead Sea Works, and there was no confirmation that both charterers were involved in the fixture of the "VANA". However, no doubt the charterers incurred costs associated with the cleaning operation, stevedores, etcetera in relation to the "AGIOS DIMITRIOS". These have not been claimed as damages. Neither have the owners faced any expenses associated with the somewhat complicated discharge of Hold # 5 in Amsterdam.
63. Moreover, the owners appeared to overlook that had the "VANA" not taken advantage of the available, vacant loading berth, they (the owners) may very well have faced an additional claim for damages by way of the extra cost of laytime and/or demurrage paid by the charterers to the owners of the delayed "VANA" during the cleaning period of the "AGIOS DIMITRIOS". We were not, therefore, persuaded that the owners merited a credit by way of the "VANA".
"There are some arbitrations in which the arbitrator is expected to form his own opinion and act on his own knowledge without recourse to evidence given by witnesses on either side: such as an arbitrator who is to decide as to whether goods are up to sample, see Mediterranean & Eastern Export Ltd. v. Fortress Fabrics (Manchester) Ltd., (1948) 81 Lloyd's Law Rep. 401; (1948) T.L.R. 337. But there are other arbitrations in which the arbitrator is expected to receive the evidence of witnesses and the submissions of advocates and to be guided by them in reaching his conclusion: such as arbitrations on shipping contracts or on building contracts. In such cases the arbitrator is often selected because of his knowledge of the trade so that he can follow the evidence in the absence of the other party, and so forth. In the present case if the defendants had been represented I have no doubt that the plaintiff's experts would have been cross-examined so as to throw doubt on their findings and on their opinions: and the defendants would have called experts to support the line of cross-examination. The arbitrator would then have been able to form a judgment based on evidence other than his own.
I cannot think it right that the defendants should be in a better position by failing to turn up. Nor is it right that the arbitrator should do for the defendants what they could and should have done for themselves. His function is not to supply evidence for the defendants but to adjudicate upon the evidence given before him. He can and should use his special knowledge so as to understand the evidence that is given, the letters that have passed, the usage of the trade the dealings of the market and to appreciate the worth of all that he sees upon a view. But he cannot use his special knowledge or at any rate he should not use it so as to provide evidence on behalf of the defendants which they have not chosen to provide for themselves. For then he would be discarding the role of an impartial arbitrator and assuming the role of advocate for the defaulting side. At any rate he should not use his own knowledge to derogate from the evidence of the plaintiffs' experts without putting his own knowledge to them and giving them a chance of answering it and showing that his own view is wrong. Such is the way in which we dealt in the pensions cases when a medical expert was himself a member of the tribunal, see Moxon v. Minister of Pensions, [1945] K.B. 490 and Starr v. Minister of Pensions, [1946] K.B. 345 at pp. 353-354.
I am afraid that the arbitrator fell into error here. He felt that it was his duty to protect the interests of the unrepresented party in much the same way as a Judge protects a litigant in person. But in a case like this I do not think it is the duty of the arbitrator to protect the interests of the unrepresented party. If the defendants do not choose to turn up to protect themselves, it is no part of the arbitrator's duty to do it for them. In particular he must not throw his own evidence into the scale on behalf of the unrepresented party or use his own special knowledge for the benefit of the unrepresented party at any rate he must not do so without giving the plaintiffs' experts a chance of dealing with it for they may be able to persuade him that his own view is erroneous."
The Estoppel Point: Discussion
a. The omission to clean out the barley residue before the giving of notice of readiness was a breach by the shipowners of clause 23 (b): (paragraph 49)
b. By accepting that notice of readiness; although the vessel was not ready, the charterers waived its invalidity or were estopped from asserting it and lay time thereby commenced to run. In reaching that conclusion the arbitrators relied by way of analogy on The HELLE SKOU, supra, and in particular upon the passage at page 214 in which Donaldson J. accepted as correct that the charterers were precluded from asserting the invalidity of the notice of readiness to load in that case. By allowing loading to commence the charterers necessarily permitted time to start running. (Paragraph 51).
c. By analogy with The HELLE SKOU , supra, waiver of the invalidity of the notice of readiness to load did not necessarily amount to waiver of the right of the charterers to damages for breach of the shipowners' distinct contractual duty to present the vessel in compliance with an express term of the charterparty requiring the holds to be clean and fit for the cargo to be loaded. (Paragraph 52).
d. Just as on the umpires finding of facts in The HELLE SKOU the acceptance of notice of readiness did not operate as a waiver of the right to damages for breach of the duty to clean the holds so in this case on its facts the result was the same. I interpose that this conclusion on the facts was clearly based on the superficial nature of the surveyor's visual inspection , which was known to the shippers. (Paragraphs 39, 40 and 53).
e. Once time had thereby started to run it would continue unless interrupted under clause 25 or the incidence of the claim for damages for breach of clause 23 (b) would by way of set off reduce the claim for demurrage by an amount equivalent to the demurrage that would have accrued had time not been interrupted. (Paragraph 54).
The VANA Points: Discussion