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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 >> Classic Maritime Inc v Lion Diversified Holdings & Anor [2009] EWHC 1142 (Comm) (21 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/1142.html Cite as: [2010] 1 Lloyd's Rep 59, [2009] EWHC 1142 (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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CLASSIC MARITIME INC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) LION DIVERSIFIED HOLDINGS BERHAD (2) LIMBUNGAN MAKMUR SDN BHD |
Defendants |
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Mr V Flynn QC and Mr D Walker (instructed by Kennedys) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 14 and 19 May 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cooke :
Introduction
Limbungan's Application for a Stay
"The Guarantor's obligations under this guarantee are independent of Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd's obligations under the Charterparty. The Counterparty may bring and prosecute separate actions against Classic Maritime Inc. and the Guarantor or may join the Guarantor and Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd in one action.
………
THIS GUARANTEE SHALL BE GOVERNED BY AND CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE WITH ENGLISH LAW WITHOUT REGARD TO PRINCIPLES OF CONFLICTS OF LAWS. THE GUARANTOR IRREVOCABLY SUBMITS TO THE NON-EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION OF AND AGREES THAT ANY ACTION TO ENFORCE THIS GUARANTEE MAY BE DETERMINED BY THE COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WAIVES ANY OBJECTION TO THE ENGLISH COURTS ON THE GROUNDS OF INCONVENIENT FORUM OR OTHERWISE IN CONNECTION WITH THIS GUARANTEE. IN ANY ACTION TO ENFORCE THIS GUARANTEE THE GUARANTOR AGREES TO ACCEPT, IN LIEU OF PERSONAL SERVICE, SERVICE OF PROCESS BY POSTAGE PREPAID REGISTERED OR CERTIFIED MAIL, RETURN RECEIPT REQUESTED, TO THE GUARANTOR AT THE ADDRESS SPECIFIED PURSUANT TO THE NOTICE PROVISIONS OF THIS GUARANTEE."
"As per main terms agreed, attached please find guarantee wording which kindly get Lion Industries to affect in accordance with Charterparty. Please confirm when same will be affected."
"2. Guarantees and promises to pay to Classic Maritime Inc., on demand, any and all amounts (the "Obligations") that Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd becomes obligated to pay to Classic Maritime Inc. as a result of Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd's failure to perform its obligations or otherwise under the Charterparty when each of the Obligations becomes due, and guarantee that if any payment that Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd makes to Classic Maritime Inc. on account of the Obligations is recovered from or is repaid by Commodities in any bankruptcy, insolvency or similar proceeding instituted by or against the Classic Maritime In., then this guarantee will continue to apply to those Obligations to the same extent as though the payment so recovered or repaid never had been made or received.
This is (a) a guarantee of payment and not of collection and (b) a continuing, absolute and irrevocable guarantee irrespective of (i) any release of or granting of time or any other indulgence to the Obligor and (ii) any other circumstance which might constitute a defense available to, or a legal or equitable discharge of, a guarantor under a guarantee given by it."
Is Lion entitled to a stay on case management grounds?
Classic's application for summary judgment against Lion
Past Consideration
"In order to induce Classic Maritime Inc. to enter into a contract of affreightment dated 13th August 2008 (the "Contract") with Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, the undersigned (the "Guarantor"):
1. Represents that it owns, directly or indirectly, all of the equity interests in Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd and, accordingly, benefit from Classic Maritime Inc's entering into and performing its obligations under the Charterparty, and
2. Guarantees and promises to pay to Classic Maritime Inc., on demand, any and all amounts (the "Obligations") that Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd becomes obligated to pay to Classic Maritime Inc. as a result of Limbungan Makmur Sdn Bhd's failure to perform its obligations or otherwise under the Charterparty when each of the Obligations becomes due."
"It is not in contradiction to the instrument to prove a larger consideration than that which is stated."
Force majeure and frustration
"Neither the vessel, master or owners, nor the charterers, shippers or receivers shall be responsible for loss or damage to, or failure to supply, load, discharge or deliver the cargo resulting from….intervention of sanitary, customs or other constituted authorities….or any other causes beyond the owners, charterers, shippers or receivers' control; always provided that any such events directly affect the performance of either party under this charterparty."
"….frustration occurs whenever the law recognizes that without default of either party a contractual obligation has become incapable of being performed because the circumstances in which performance is called for would render it a thing radically different from that which was undertaken by the contract. Non haec in foedera veni. It was not this that I promised to do. … It is for that reason that special importance is necessarily attached to the occurrence of any unexpected event that, as it were, changes the face of things. But, even so, it is not hardship or inconvenience or material loss itself which calls the principle of frustration into play. There must be as well such a change in the significance of the obligation that the thing undertaken would, if performed, be a different thing from that contracted for."
"It is of the utmost importance that the action of a court, when it decides that in view of a supervening situation the rights and obligations under a contract have automatically ceased, should not be misunderstood. The suggestion that an "uncontemplated turn of events" is enough to enable a court to substitute its notion of what is "just and reasonable" for the contract as it stands, even though there is no "frustrating event," appears to be likely to lead to some misunderstanding. The parties to an executory contract are often faced, in the course of carrying it out, with a turn of events which they did not at all anticipate – a wholly abnormal rise or fall in prices, a sudden depreciation of currency, an unexpected obstacle to execution, or the like. Yet this does not in itself affect the bargain they have made. If, on the other hand, a consideration of the terms of the contract, in the light of the circumstances existing when it was made, shows that they never agreed to be bound in a fundamentally different situation which has now unexpectedly emerged, the contract ceases to bind at that point – not because the court in its discretion thinks it just and reasonable to qualify the terms of the contract, but because on its true construction it does not apply in that situation."
"In effect, most forward contracts can be regarded as a form of commercial insurance in which every event is intended to be at the risk of one party or another. Each party is likely most to need the maintenance of such a contract exactly when the other would most wish to be rid of it. … All the uncertainties of a commercial contract can ultimately be expressed, though not very accurately, in terms of money, and rarely, if ever, is it a ground for inferring frustration of an adventure, that the contract has turned out to be a loss or even a commercial disaster for somebody. If a contract is really a speculative contract, as this plainly is, the doctrine of frustration can rarely, if ever, apply to it, for the basis of a speculative contract is to distribute all the risks on one side or on the other and to eliminate any chance of the contract falling to the ground, unless, indeed, the law has put an end to it. … No one can tell how long a spell of commercial depression may last; no suspense can be more harassing than the vagaries of foreign exchanges: but contracts are made for the purpose of fixing the incidence of such risks in advance, and their occurrence only makes it the more necessary to uphold a contract and not to make them the ground for discharging it." (Lord Sumner at page 464)
Quantum
Conclusion