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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 >> Mansel Oil Ltd & Anor v Troon Storage Tankers SA [2008] EWHC 1269 (Comm) (09 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/1269.html Cite as: [2008] 2 All ER (Comm) 898, [2008] EWHC 1269 (Comm), [2008] 1 CLC 945, [2008] 2 Lloyd's Rep 384 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) MANSEL OIL LIMITED (2) VITOL S.A. |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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TROON STORAGE TANKERS SA |
Defendant |
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for the Claimants
Steven Berry QC & Jeremy Brier (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 16th May 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE :
"4. The vessel shall be delivered by Owners at a port in WAF- Ghana/Nigeria range in Charterers' option and redelivered to Owners at a port in WAF- Ghana/Nigeria range in Charterers' option.
5. The vessel shall not be delivered to Charterers before 25th September 2007 and Charterers shall have the option of cancelling this charter if the vessel is not ready and at their disposal on or before 31st October 2007. Notices: delivery/redelivery 30-25-15 days estimated then 10-7-5-3-2-1 definite days notice. All times are to be based on Universal Time (UT)."
Cancellation
"Whether the Applicants [i.e. the Charterers] were not entitled to cancel the charterparty by reason of any absence of nomination of a delivery port."
The parties' submissions
The Charterers
Readiness
The Owners
The authorities
Hudson's Bay
"... that is to say, a loading spot in the port …if the charterers had complied with that, still the captain could not have saved his cancelling date. For these reasons I think the view taken by the learned judge was right".
"Are the shipowners right when they say: True it is we were not ready to load on May 31, but that was because you had not given us orders to load at a safe loading place and that was a condition precedent to our obligation to be ready to load by May 31 1920"
"I do not in any way dissent from the other point of view which appeals to my Lord, namely, that here at the time the notice was given by the charterers, the ship, in fact, was unable to proceed to any more definite place of loading, be it a dock or be it a berth, and that, therefore, I suppose it would be said that an order to load at a loading place was excused by reason of the ship [being] in the place where she was making it evident to the charterers that it was impossible for her to perform the orders given".
"… a safe loading place in the port within the meaning of this charterparty and the readiness of the vessel to load at such place, would be readiness to load at a place within the port being safe to which she could be directed and had been directed by the charterers. It is clear that in this instance she had not been so directed to any such place; and it might have been that that would have been an answer to the particular case made against them by the charterers; but, as I have said, I agree with my Lord in thinking that even if she had been so directed on this 30th May to a particular berth or shoot in the harbour of Buenos Ayres by the charterers instead of being merely directed generally to the harbour itself, she would have been quite unable to comply with that direction within the time limited for the purpose and accordingly it would have made no difference in the result whether the direction given had taken that form: the result would have been the same as it is now having regard to the form in which the direction was, in fact, given, and, accordingly, on that ground, I am of opinion that the appeal should be dismissed".
"The North Sea"
The facts
"Vessel shall be placed at the disposal of the Charterers at Charterers' berth Hong Kong or dlosp[3] Hong Kong in Charterers' option…as the Charterers may direct…. Vessel on her delivery shall be ready to receive container [sic] with clean-swept holds and tight, staunch strong and in every way fitted for container service …"
"14. … should vessel not have been delivered on or before 19th August 1995 12.00 hours Charterers or their agents shall have the option of cancelling this Charter…"
Before the arbitrator
First instance
"The making of delivery depends … on the charterers identifying where delivery is to take place. The only charter-party agreement is that time runs from the placing of the vessel at charterers' disposal at the place so selected by the charterer. There is no basis on which even owners, still less the charterers when they are in default of selection, can claim to treat delivery as having been made on any other basis or at any other place… The express language… requires delivery to be effected by placing of the vessel at the charterers' disposal at a place to be selected by the charterers. Unless and until charterers select such a place, owners cannot deliver in accordance with the charter …In the present case, the time for delivery never arose, and there is thus no basis on which charterers could assert, in the context of the cancelling clause, that the vessel was due to be, but had not been, delivered.
It does not assist charterers to argue that, if they had identified a place for delivery, owners would not have delivered the vessel in time and in the right condition at that place. The operation of the cancelling clause depends on delivery actually being due and not being made when due. Charterers' contention that they were under no obligation to select the place for delivery, since it was clear that owners would not be able to deliver in the right condition and in time at any place so selected, has no basis. In practical terms, it would lead after the event to speculative arguments whether charterers were right about this. In principle, there is no way in which charterers were relieved of their obligation to identify the place for delivery, merely because they considered, however correctly, that owners would be unable to effect delivery there by the time specified in the cancelling clause…….
…..In the present case, charterers' failure to identify any place for delivery means in my judgment that delivery never became due at all, and charterers' claim to invoke the cancellation clause was unjustified"
On appeal
"…apply where a vessel is clearly never going to be able to meet her cancelling date and would require the charterers to go through a futile and premature exercise of nomination which everyone knew that the vessel would be unable to comply with. If the Charterers were right to say, in the present case that the vessel was not in a deliverable state….. and that was so regardless of whether she was given orders to proceed to one or other of the places referred to in the charterparty…. it is hard to see upon what basis the failure to give the requisite order in exercise of the option could affect the right to cancel for lack of readiness"
"It can strongly be argued that if the charterers do not exercise their option to direct the vessel to one or other place within Hong Kong delivery in Hong Kong suffices. They have waived their right to require the vessel to proceed (for their own benefit) to one or other of the two places first, or have precluded themselves from insisting that the vessel do so. This is not a point of general principle; it is simply a conclusion which is capable of being supported on the particular terms and circumstances of this charter."
Discussion
Obligation to nominate?
"… in the absence of any special provision in a charterparty, the effect of the nomination of a loading or discharging port by the charterer is that the charterparty must thereafter be treated as if the nominated port had originally been written into the charterparty and that the charterer has neither the right nor the obligation to change that nomination".
Time for Nomination
"nominate a delivery port; and/or that they did so in sufficient time for the vessel to proceed to the delivery port, and for the [Owners] to deliver the Vessel to the [Charterers]".
The latest date by which it is claimed that a valid nomination could have been given was 15th October so as to allow 25-30 days for travel from Piraeus to West Africa. (However, it is to be noted that the assumption upon which the preliminary issue proceeds is that a notice given on 15th October would not have been sufficient to enable the Vessel to proceed to the delivery port).
"5.17. In the absence of any prescribed time limit, it is submitted that the nomination of a loading or discharging port must be made within a reasonable time[4] and that it should be made early enough to ensure that the vessel suffers no delay resulting from the absence of nomination. In The Rio Sun[5] it was held that a c.i.f. buyer who had the right to name the discharging port owed such a duty to his seller who had chartered the vessel. There is no decision precisely in point in the context of a charterparty, although it has been held that the nomination of a loading port or range must be made at a time which will not prevent the vessel from making her cancelling date. So also the charterer cannot delay his nomination so as to prevent the vessel from being able to become an "arrived ship" for the purpose of the counting of laytime. However, it seems that, if the vessel is able to become an arrived ship without such nomination being made, the nomination need not be made before the expiry of the laytime[6]."
Futility
"when a term has to be performed by one party as a condition precedent to the ability of the other party to perform another term, especially an essential term such as the nomination of a port, the term as to time for the performance of the obligation will in general fall to be treated as a condition"
(See Bunge Corporation v Tradax S.A., [1981] 1 WLR 711 per Lord Roskill at 729G).
Barrett Bros
"…notice of readiness is given to start laytime running not merely to provide charterers with information which in many cases will be in their possession. As such it represents an essential step in the contractual mechanism for allocating the risk of delay in loading or discharging. Whether a step of that kind is essential in the performance of a contract is a matter for the agreement of the parties. If the parties have stipulated that a notice must be given in order to bring some other provision of the contract into operation, I doubt whether it could ever be dispensed with on the ground that to give such notice would be futile".
Conclusion
Note 1 At a spot described by Atkin, L.J., as one "where I think no cargo of wheat has been loaded within the last generation". [Back] Note 2 I do not take the opening paragraph of his judgment to mean that he agreed with Lord Justice Atkin's view on the first question. [Back] Note 3 i.e. dropping last outward sea pilot. [Back] Note 4 See the "Steendiek" [1961] 2 Lloyd's Rep 138. [Back]