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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 >> Sea Success Maritime Inc v African Maritime Carriers Ltd. [2005] EWHC 1542 (Comm) (15 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/1542.html Cite as: [2005] 2 All ER (Comm) 445, [2005] 2 CLC 167, [2005] 2 Lloyd's Rep 692, [2005] EWHC 1542 (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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SEA SUCCESS MARITIME INC |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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AFRICAN MARITIME CARRIERS LIMITED |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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Mr Stephen Males QC and Mr John Russell (instructed by Middleton Potts, Solicitors, London) for the Defendant
Mr Stephen Hofmeyr QC (instructed by Bentleys Stokes & Lowless, Solicitors, London) for
Key Maritime GmbH
Hearing dates: 7th July 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Aikens :
Background
i) "Whether (as contended for by the Applicant) under clause 52 of the charterparty dated 9 June 2003 between the Applicant (ie. Sea Success) and the Respondent (ie. AMC) the master is entitled and obliged to reject cargo which would properly be the subject of a reservation in the bill of lading as to the apparent good order and condition of the cargo or the packing; or whether (as found by the Arbitrators) the master is entitled and obliged to reject cargo only if it, once loaded, would be properly described in the bill of lading in a way which would qualify the statement of the apparent order and condition of the cargo "ultimately proposed" to be stated in the bill of lading by the shipper.
ii) Consequent on the answer to (i) above, whether the master was entitled and obliged to reject the cargo presented for shipment at Novorossiysk in September 2004".
The Facts giving Rise to the Dispute between the parties
"The vessel to use Charterers' Bills of Lading or Bills of Lading approved by Charterers and/or sub-Charterers which to include New Both-To-Blame Collision Clause, New Jason Clause, Clause Paramount General, USA or Canadian, as applicable, P&I Bunkering Clause and Baltime 1939 War Risks Clauses, during the period of this Charter. Master to authorise, time by time, in writing Charterers or their appointed Agents to sign Bills of Lading on behalf of Master in accordance with Mate's receipts. Master has the right and must reject any cargo that are [sic] subject to clausing of the BS/L".
At the time the Master, the Owners and their lawyers all contended that only "good" cargo could be loaded; that any cargo that would be "subject to remarks" in the bill of lading must be rejected; and that by reason of the condition of the cargo tendered it would be subject to remarks in the bill of lading and therefore must be rejected by the Master pursuant to the final sentence of clause 52.
The Arbitration and Award
i) "In what circumstances, on the true construction of clause 52 of the Charter, is the Master entitled and obliged to reject the cargo presented for shipment/tendered for loading?
ii) Did those circumstances exist at Novorossiysk?"
As I have said, each of the time charters contained a clause that was identical to clause 52 of the Charter. Therefore, these issues arose in relation to each of the time charters. At the combined arbitration hearing, AMC and Key Maritime put forward slightly different formulations for the Declaratory Relief that they sought. The arbitrators' Declarations are in the form put forward by Key Maritime, although it is clear from the arbitrators' Reasons at paragraph 66 that they did not regard the differences between the two formulations as significant. The two Declarations made by the Arbitrators in answer to the two Preliminary Issues are as follows:
"i) On the true construction of the final sentence of clause 52 of the Charter, the Master is entitled and obliged to reject cargo presented for shipment/tendered for loading if the cargo, once loaded would be properly described in the bill of lading in away which would qualify the statement of the apparent order and condition of the cargo ultimately proposed to be stated in the bill of lading by the Shipper.
ii) No as there was no (or ultimately no) dispute between the Master/Owners, on the one hand and Key Maritime/the Shippers on the other hand as to either the apparent order and condition of the cargo or appropriate description of the cargo to be included in the Bills of Lading"
i) By lines 45 46, it is agreed that the vessel is " .to be employed in carrying lawful merchandise excluding see clause 42". Clause 42 provides that the vessel not be employed in the carriage of nuclear and radioactive cargo or waste or other nuclear material. There is also a long list of cargoes that are specifically prohibited from being loaded under the Charter. The clause stipulates that the charterers had the right to load a defined number of particular cargoes (scrap, concentrates and sulphur) within a twelve-month period. There are further detailed provisions in clause 42 as to the loading of cargoes. The clause runs to two and a half pages in all.
ii) Clause 8 of the Charter contains the usual employment and indemnity provision. The clause provides in part:
"However, at Charterers' option, the Charterers or their agents may sign Bills of Lading on behalf of the Captain always in conformity with Mate's receipts, see clause 52. All Bills of Lading shall be without prejudice to this Charter and the Charterers shall indemnify the Owners against all consequences of liability which arise from any inconsistency between this Charter and any Bills of Lading or Waybills signed by the Charterers or their agents or by the Captain at their request."
iii) Clause 62 sets out detailed trading exclusions for the vessel.
(1) The first questions is: What does the word "clausing" mean, in the context of Clause 52 and the whole of the Charter? In the arbitrators' view the word "clausing" has no ordinary settled meaning and has no settled commercial usage. Therefore, the meaning of the word, in the context of the Charter, must be ascertained by identifying the objective intention of the parties. (See paragraphs 52 of the Reasons).
(2) The commercial purpose of clause 52 is to resolve arguments at load ports which, if not resolved, would lead to disputes as to whether the vessel was off-hire and also to loss of time and expense. " .. The final sentence of clause 52 was designed to avoid disputes between the Shipper and the Master, as to the appropriate description of the cargo being loaded or about to be loaded to be inserted in the Bills of Lading." The clause was not intended "to operate in circumstances where there is no disagreement between the Master and Shipper as to the proposed description of the cargo in the Bills of Lading." (See paragraph 60 of the Reasons).
(3) The authorities show that the question of whether the goods are "in apparent good order and condition" depends primarily on the nature of the goods and the way in which they are described in the bills of lading that are tendered for signature by the Master. The question of the "apparent order and condition" of the cargo to be loaded cannot be divorced from the description of the goods in the bill of lading: (see paragraphs 53 and 54 of the Reasons). The reliance placed by Sea Success on the terms of the UCP 500 is of no assistance in ascertaining the meaning of clause 52. Nor does the distinction drawn in the cases on sale of goods between "condition" and "description" help in the present context. (See paragraphs 55 and 56 of the Reasons).
(4) The common sense construction of the last sentence of clause 52, in the context of the scheme of the Charter, is that "If the Master properly wants to add accurate words to the proposed description of the cargo (which would be the act of clausing the bill) with which the shipper does not agree, then clause 52 applies and the Master is entitled and indeed obliged to reject the cargo in respect of which he considers the addition is necessary". But the clause is not intended to be used if there is no disagreement between the Master and the shipper as to the proposed description of the cargo in the bills of lading. Were it otherwise, then damaged, worn or used goods could never be shipped under this Charter, despite the fact that certain categories of damaged goods are permitted cargoes within clause 42 of the Charter. (See paragraphs 58 and 60 of the Reasons).
(5) Paragraph 63 set outs the arbitrators' conclusion on the first Preliminary Issue and also answers the second one. That paragraph states:
"If the proper description of the cargo would qualify the description of the apparent order and condition of the cargo that the shippers proposed to put in the bills of lading, then the Master would be entitled and obliged to reject the cargo at the time that the cargo was presented for loading. There will probably always have to be a discussion as to the proper description of the condition of the cargo (in the context of a cargo of steel, that will be done once the pre-loading steel survey is available). In the absence of agreement, the Master will reject the cargo until the condition of the goods is accurately described. It is to be noted that, at Novorossiysk, the Charterers proposed to incorporate the apparent order and description as found by the Club surveyors."
The arguments of Sea Success on the appeal
i) The provision in the last sentence of clause 52 is to deal with differences between (a) the apparent order and condition of the cargo as it is described in voyage orders given to the ship which will be set out in the bill of lading prepared for signature, and (b) the actual apparent order and condition of the cargo to be loaded, as seen by the Master when he examines the cargo immediately before loading. The description of cargo given in voyage orders will usually follow that given in any sale contract for the goods concerned.
ii) A Shipper is entitled to give a description of the cargo for inclusion in a draft Mate's receipt or bill of lading that is in accordance with the description given in the sale contract relating to the goods. Indeed the shipper may be obliged to do so under the sale contract.
iii) It is the duty of the ship's Mate when he completes and signs a Mate's receipt to ensure that the description of the cargo received and its condition as stated on the receipt is accurate. Likewise it is the duty of the Master (or his agent) to ensure that the description of the cargo and the condition of the cargo as set out in the bill of lading are accurate before he signs it. (Mr Berry relied in this regard in particular on the analysis of Mustill LJ in Naviera Mogor SA v Societe Metallurgique de Normandie: "The Nogar Marin" [1988] 1 Lloyd's Rep 412 at 420 421).
iv) If, in order that the Master (or his agent) can sign the bill of lading as recording accurately both the description and the condition of the cargo, he has to add words to the description of the cargo to be loaded, then that additional wording constitutes "clausing of the bill of lading".
v) This meaning of the word "clausing" is consistent with the normal meaning of that word in relation to bills of lading as understood in the shipping and international sale of goods community. Mr Berry drew my attention to the reference in paragraph 28 of the arbitrators' Reasons which quotes a passage from a document produced by the Skuld P&I Club, called "Carriage of Steel Cargoes". That document describes a "clean bill of lading" as one which states the cargo as being in "apparent good order and condition without containing adverse remarks". The Skuld document contrasts this with " a claused bill of lading". The Skuld document comments that where the cargo is not in "apparent good order and condition", the carrier is "entitled to insist on the bill of lading being claused .".
vi) Mr Berry submitted that this interpretation of the word "clausing" is also consistent with authority. He referred to British Imex v Midland Bank [1958] 1QB 542 at 551, where Salmon J gave a definition of a "clean" bill of lading as "one that does not contain any reservations as to the apparent good order and condition of the goods or the packing". That, Mr Berry submitted, was in contrast to a "claused" bill of lading. Mr Berry also referred to Boukadoura Maritime Corporation v Societe Anonyme Marocaine de L'Industrie et due Raffinage: "The BOUKADOURA" [1989] 1 Lloyd's Rep.393 at 396, where Evans J describes a claused bill of lading as being one which qualifies the apparent good order and condition of the cargo as described in the bill of lading.
vii) The arbitrators' Declaration as to the meaning of the final sentence of clause 52 was inconsistent with the actual wording of the sentence in the clause. The arbitrators apparently contemplated some discussion between the Master and the charterers or shippers before the cargo was loaded and then a situation where the Charterers or Shippers "ultimately proposed" a statement as to the description and apparent order and condition of the cargo in the draft bill of lading tendered to the Master. But the notion of a discussion before loading as to the draft terms of the bill of lading was impractical: ("the impracticability point").
viii) Moreover, Mr Berry submitted, at the stage that the discussion was complete and the draft bill of lading tendered for signature, the cargo would already have been loaded and so it would be too late for the Master to reject the cargo and he would have failed to comply with the provision in the last sentence of clause 52 that he must "reject any cargo that are [sic] subject to clausing of the bs/l." (This was dubbed "the timing point").
ix) Mr Berry said that the last sentence of clause 52 has two commercial purposes. The first, he said, is to avoid delay and expense at a load port. Once the Master had inspected the goods, if it was clear that there was a difference between the description of the goods as set out in the voyage orders as reflected in the draft Mate's receipt and bill of lading to be signed, and the goods waiting to be loaded, then the Master had a duty immediately to refuse to load that cargo. The second object is to prevent the Master and Owners from being put in the invidious position of refusing a shipper's request to sign "clean" bills of lading, even though it was clear to the Master that the cargo, as described in the voyage orders and the Shippers' description of the goods in the bill of lading, does not match the condition of the cargo to be loaded. Because the Master had the duty to reject any such cargo, the exercise of that duty would avoid the possibility of subsequent "spurious or unjust claims or proceedings" - to use the phrase recorded at paragraph 36 of the arbitrators' Reasons.
Conclusion and Reasons
"On the true construction of the final sentence of clause 52 of the Charter, the Master is entitled and obliged to reject cargo presented for shipment/tendered for loading if the cargo so presented/tendered is described in the wording of the bill of lading (as ultimately proposed by the shipper) in a way that would require the statement of the apparent order and condition of the cargo so described to be qualified, so that the bill of lading as signed by the Master would be accurate".