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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 >> Carboex SA v Louis Dreyfus Commodities Suisse SA [2011] EWHC 1165 (Comm) (12 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/1165.html Cite as: [2011] 1 CLC 954, [2011] EWHC 1165 (Comm), [2011] 2 All ER (Comm) 365, [2011] 2 Lloyd's Rep 177 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
AND
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Carboex SA |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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Louis Dreyfus Commodities Suisse SA |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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Siobán Healy QC and Jessica Sutherland (instructed by Reed Smith) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates: 17 and 18 March 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Field :
9. The cargo to be discharged by consignee at port of discharge, free of expense and risk to the vessel, at the average rate of 25,000 metric tons perdayweather working day of 24 consecutive hourspermitting, Sundays and holidays andafter noon onSaturdays included, excluded Superholidays, see also CL 40exceptedprovided vessel can deliver at this rate. If longer detained, Charterersconsigneeto pay vessel demurrage at the rate of See Cl 68 … per running day (or pro rata for part thereof). If sooner dispatched, vessel to pay Chartereror his agentsSee Cl 68 … per day (or pro rata for part thereof) dispatch money for all working time saved.Time to commence twenty-four (24) hours, Sundays and holiday excepted, after vessel is ready to unload and written notice given, whether in berth or not, even if vessel is already on demurrage,and the time allowable for discharging to be calculated on the basis of bill of lading quantity. In Case of strikes, lockouts, civil commotions or any other causes included but not limited to breakdown of shore equipment or accidents beyond the control of the Charterersconsigneewhich prevent or delay the discharging, such time is not to count unless the vessel is already on demurrage.
Cl. 40 At port of discharge, time to commence twelve (12) hours after the vessel's arrival at berth, vessel is ready to unload and Notice of Readiness received and accepted, unless sooner commenced in which case time actually used to count. If the berth is not available when vessel tenders Notice of Readiness, but provided vessel/Owners not at fault in relation thereto, then laytime shall commence twelve (12) hours after first permissible tide, Notice of Readiness received and accepted, whether in berth or not, whether in free pratique or not, whether in customs clearance or not, unless no customs clearance or no free pratique due to vessel's fault, unless sooner commenced in which case only time actually used to count. Notices to be tendered in writing Telex, Cable, Fax or Radio form from usual waiting place, any time day or night Sundays and Holidays included excepting Superholidays as below. ….
(i) Whether clause 9 of the COA applies in the case of a vessel which is delayed by the after effects of a strike which has ended; and
(ii) Whether clause 9 of the COA applies in the case of a vessel which has arrived after the strike has ended.
Does the strike exception in clause 9 apply to a vessel which is unable to berth due to berth congestion caused by a strike?
If the berth is not available when vessel tenders Notice of Readiness, but provided vessel/Owners not at fault in relation thereto, then laytime shall commence twelve (12) hours after first permissible tide, Notice of Readiness received and accepted, whether in berth or not, whether in free pratique or not, whether in customs clearance or not, unless no customs clearance or no free pratique due to vessel's fault, unless sooner commenced in which case only time actually used to count [Emphasis supplied]
was that prima facie the risk of delay due to congestion at the discharge port was on the Charterers. She relied on the fact that clause 40 was a bespoke clause and cited the following passages in Lord Brandon's judgement in The Kyzikos [1989] 1 Lloyd's Rep 1;
…. The first consideration is the meaning which has been given to the phrase "whether in berth or not" in the authorities relating to it[1]. …..
So far as the authorities are concerned, they present two aspects, one positive and the other negative. The positive aspect of the authorities is that in them the phrase "whether in berth or not", when used in a berth charter-party, has uniformly over a long period been interpreted as relating to the availability or unavailability of a berth. In other words the phrase has been interpreted as dealing with the problem of congestion in ports, and putting on the charterers rather than the owners the risk of delay caused by such congestion….
The negative aspect of the authorities is this. The phrase "whether in berth or not" has been used in berth charter-parties at least since 1909, the date of the the charter-party in Northfield Steamship Co v Compagnie L'Union des Gaz [1912] 1 KB 434. Yet counsel for the owners was unable to point to any reported case in which it had ever been contended that the phrase covered a case where a berth was available for a ship but she was prevented by bad weather from proceeding to it.
The inference which it seems to me to be right to draw from these two aspects of the authorities, the one positive and the other negative, is that the phrase "whether in berth or not" has over a very long period been treated as shorthand for what, if set out in long hand, would be "whether in berth (a berth being available) or not in berth (a berth not being available)." There is, in my view, nothing unusual in commercial men, knowing the purpose for which a phrase is inserted into a particular type of contract expressing their common intention in a shorthand form in this way.
If the cargo cannot be loaded by reason of riots or any dispute between masters and men, occasioning a strike of …. Railway employés or other labour connected with the working, loading, or delivery of the cargo proved to be intended for the steamer, or through obstructions on the railways or in the docks or other loading places beyond the control of charterers, the time lost not to be counted as part of the lay-days….
We have had a very able argument from Mr Hamilton in which he tried to make very refined distinctions as to the real scope of the several words used in the clause. In my opinion this is a business document, drawn up by business men to be used in a business sense, and there is no room for those very refined distinctions. We have to look at the question from the point of view of business men, and ask was this a strike which stopped the cargo being delivered to the steamer. I have not the slightest doubt that any business man would say that it was, and I think that the reasons given by the House of Lords in Larsen v Sylvester[3], although that case does not directly bear upon this, gives the approval of that tribunal as to the manner of regarding documents of this nature.
Any time lost at port or ports of loading and discharging through riots, detention by ice …. and time lost by inability of steamer to load and discharge as above not to count as lay-days. If the cargo cannot be loaded by reason of riots, civil commotions …. or by reason of obstructions or stoppages beyond the control of the charterers on the railways feeding the port or ports of loading or in transit or in the docks, or other loading places …. the time for loading … shall not count during the continuance of such causes …. In the case of any delay by reason of the aforementioned causes, no claim for damages or demurrage shall be made by the charterers or owners …
Mr Mocatta attempts to differentiate between the two cases by reference to two other clauses in this charter-party. He relies, first of all, upon the fact that in Clause 7 there are the words "whether in berth of not," and he says that shows that the finding of a berth is made a matter entirely for the charterer and that the charterer, in reply, undertakes the liability of it. To my mind that clause can have no effect upon the construction to be put upon the exceptions in Clause 11. All that that clause is doing is to indicate the time at which a notice of readiness shall be given in order to fix when the lay-days shall commence to run. And what it is saying is that that notice may be given, whether the ship is in berth or not, and the existence of that clause cannot, to my mind, have any effect in enabling me to put a different construction upon the exceptions clause from that which was adopted in the case of Leonis Steamship Company Ltd v Joseph Rank Ltd.
If the cargo cannot be loaded by reason of Riots, Civil Commotions or of a Strike or Lock-out of any class of workmen, essential to the loading of the cargo or by reason of obstructions or stoppages beyond the control of the Charterers on the Railways, or in the Docks or other loading places …. the time for loading ….shall not count during the continuance of such causes …In case of any delay by reason of the before mentioned, no claim for damages or demurrage, shall be made by Charterers, Receivers of the cargo, or Owners of the steamer ….
It has been put up by Counsel – though I confess at the moment I am not exactly clear as to the consequences of it – that the words in the charterparty to which reference has been made "whether in berth or not" must in this case have some particular bearing, and emphasis is laid upon the fact that those words "whether in berth or not" are not included in the printed part of the charter-party, but have been added later by typewriter.
As I understand this charter-party, the position is that it was the duty of the ship on arriving at the port in question to give notice, in accordance with the terms of the charter-party, of readiness to load. That notice having been given, then the lay days, that is to say, the time allowed in the charter-party for loading, would commence at 7 a.m. on the next business day whether the ship was in berth or not.
Mr Donaldson has, I think quite correctly, said that the effect of that is, to use his phrase, that at 7 o'clock the morning after notice was given the clock begins to tick, and it ticks whether the ship is alongside loading or whether the ship is still standing off somewhere in the port, and will continue to tick for the necessary number of lay days unless it is stopped permanently or temporarily by some event which is within the meaning of the strike clause. That appears to me to be a proper reading of those words in the charter-party. It may be that the lay days commenced – and indeed I think there is no doubt – at 7 o'clock on the morning after notice was given, but, because of the congestion in the dock which made it impossible for this ship to come alongside for nearly a fortnight, there was an obstruction within the meaning of the charter-party which stopped the clock, which was not able to tick again until there was a berth available.
The lay days run from the date of notification. If there is delay, and the ship cannot come alongside, any liability for such delay will prima facie fall on the charterer, but the parties have expressly agreed that this prima facie liability to demurrage shall be governed by a clause of exception in certain circumstances. They have chosen to treat as one of the exceptions to the charterer's liability delay due to "obstructions". The meaning of that word must be ascertained on ordinary principles. That is its ordinary morning as construed in these Courts, and its meaning cannot, I think, be affected merely because the charterer, apart from the clause of exception, would be liable for delay in berthing due to commercial congestion.
Mr. Justice Branson dealt with the same point in the case of Reardon Smith Line Ltd v East Asiatic Company Ltd (1938) 62 Ll L Rep 23 at p. 27-8; (1938) 44 Com. Cas. 10, at p. 15, and he deals with this very point quite shortly. He came to the conclusion that the fact that in the charterparty the words were inserted "whether in berth or not" could not make any difference to the ordinary meaning of the word "obstructions", and he therefore adopted the construction which had been given in the Leonis (No. 2) case, sup. I agree with his reasoning, and I do not think I can usefully add anything thereto.
Lay or working days shall not count at ports of loading during any time when the supply or loading of stiffening, or the supply or bringing to rail, craft or otherwise to port of loading or alongside the vessel, or the loading of cargo or the intended cargo, or part thereof, is delayed by …. force majeure …. strikes …. or any other hindrance of whatsoever nature beyond the charterers' control ..
… Six weather working lay days …. to commence twenty-four hours after receipt …. of the captain's written notice of readiness accompanied by the surveyor's certificate that his vessel is …. ready to receive cargo whether in berth or not are to be allowed the charterers for loading …
Was the delay then caused by one of the excepted clauses? The judge, in approaching this question, directed himself correctly, in my judgment, when he sought to apply the principles stated by Fletcher Moulton LJ in Leonis v Rank (No. 2), and by Lord Dunedin in Leyland Shipping Co. v Norwich Union.[6] Viewing the matter from a business point of view and as a matter of common sense he reached the conclusion that the cause of the delay to these four ships was the strike. For my part, I am of the same opinion. It would, I think, be difficult to reach any other conclusion on this point without saying that Leonis v Rank (No. 2) was wrongly decided, which, so far as I know, has never been suggested. In that case the ship was delayed in reaching her loading berth because of a congestion of shipping following a strike which was all over before she reached the loading port. Yet Bigham J and the Court of Appeal had no difficulty in arriving at the conclusion that the delay was due to the strike, so that the time lost came within the exceptions clause in that case.
If I am wrong in saying that the delay in this case was due to the strike, I should hold that the charterers would in any event bring themselves within the exception of "any other hindrance of whatsoever nature beyond the charterers' control." It is conceded that in the context of this clause these words cannot be construed ejusdem generis with the causes previously specified. That being so, the words used, as it seems to me, provide the widest possible cover.
Time to commence when steamer is ready to unload and written notice given, whether in berth or not. In case of strikes, lock-outs, civil commotions, or any other causes or accidents beyond the control of the consignees which prevents or delays the discharging, such time is not to count, unless the steamer is already in demurrage.
It appears to me that the appellants, having already had all the benefit to which they were entitled under clause 8 by the exclusion in the computation of the lay days of all time lost by reason of the strike, are endeavouring, to the extent of 6 ¼ days, to secure that benefit a second time ….It must be remembered that according to the express terms of the charterparty the lay days commence to run whether the vessel is or is not berthed. It follows that the mere fact the four available berths being already occupied when the vessel arrives is no reason for excluding any period of time from the computation of the lay days. ….The period of delay due to the occupancy of the four berths would in any case be counted in reckoning the lay days, and there is nothing in the statement of facts to show that this period was increased by reason of the strike beyond the period which the respondent has already allowed between January 12 and February 15. We are not told when the four vessels respectively went into berth or what was the tonnage of their respective cargoes.
My Lords, I do not construe the agreed statement of facts as warranting the inference drawn at the trial, that "had it not been for the strike the four steamers would have been discharged and the berths would have been free, and therefore the Goathland would have been discharged in ordinary course." I think that the statement is consistent with the arrival of some or all of these vessels so short a time before the Goathland's arrival that considerable delay, or even delay as long as that now in question, might have happened to her in ordinary course.
Be this as it may, I do not think the charterers can succeed. It is to be remembered that when notice of readiness had been given, the ship being then ready to unload, the shipowner's part is done and the risk of delay, including the risk of want of a berth, falls on the charterer, subject to his right to bring himself within the strike clause in question if he can. The words are express, "whether in berth or not." I think the words "which prevents or delays the discharging" mean strikes which in themselves prevent or delay the discharging of the chartered ship herself, and do not extend to the case of strikes which only prevent the chartered ship from getting into a berth because they prevent some other ship from getting out of that berth. Further, the Goathland was not delayed by the fact that partial discharging went on during the seventy-five hours in question, but by the total absence of any discharging during the earlier days. The fact that more work was not done during the seventy-five hours may in a sense have delayed her; though even so not for the seventy-five hours, but in truth the work actually done during that time advanced instead of delaying her discharging, because pro tanto it brought her nearer to the point at which she could berth and begin her discharge.
One of the effects of the strike was that the Goathland could not be berthed because the four berths at Villa Constitucion were occupied by other steamers which had arrived before the Goathland. These steamers had been delayed in discharging and remained occupying the four berths by reason of the strike. In my opinion the occupation of the four berths made no difference. There was an obligation upon the appellants to discharge, whether or not there were vacant berths, so soon as the Goathland was ready to unload and written notice had been given. My Lords, in my opinion, the appeal fails.
My Lords, I learn from the agreed statement of facts that during the period from January 27 to February 15 the Goathland could not be berthed or discharged, because the four berths were occupied by other steamers, and that those steamers remained occupying the berths by reason of the strike. These statements may be compressed into the single statement that the Goathland failed to get a berth by reason of the strike. But under the charter time is to commence when steamer ready to unload and notice given whether in berth or not. The charterer took the risk of being unable to get a berth. The Goathland was prevented from discharging, not by the strike, but by a consequence of the strike, namely, that the berths were occupied by other vessels longer than they otherwise would have been. From January 12 to January 27 she was also unable to get a berth. She has, however, rightly or wrongly, been allowed this time because there was a strike. She is really seeking to be allowed this time over again. There is nothing to show that if there had been no strike she would have been able to get a berth at once upon arrival on January 12. Neither is there anything to show that if the four ships had arrived just before her, say, on January 11, they would have discharged and left the berths free in time to allow her to escape demurrage. There are not, I think, facts to support the charterer's contention. I think the appeal fails and must be dismissed.
Sellers LJ:
I would agree with McNair J that the decision establishes and applies the principle that the mere existence of a strike is not sufficient; it must have some causative effect upon the operations of the particular ship concerned. The decision was based on the different facts and a different and less wide exceptions clause and it is in no sense a decision which binds this court in this case. It has provided abundant argument, especially the passage in the speech of Lord Sumner where he says; "I think the words 'which prevents or delays the discharging' mean strikes which in themselves prevent or delay the discharging of the chartered ship herself, and do not extend to the case of strikes which only prevent the chartered ship from getting into a berth because they prevent some other ship from getting out to that berth." Lord Wrenbury would seem to support this view. It was expressed in the setting of the Marwood facts, and with all deference to authorities of such distinction I would venture to question whether a jury of business men would arrive at a similar conclusion on what is substantially if not entirely a question of fact. [P 78]
Willmer LJ:
In support of this line of reasoning [the delay was not caused by the strike but by charterers' other commitments] reliance was placed on the decision of the House of Lords in Central Argentine Railway Ltd. V. Marwood. I do not pause to set out the facts of this rather unusual and difficult case, for they are, I think, sufficiently set out in the judgment of McNair J. The essential fact is that the ship in respect of which demurrage was being claimed was, because of a strike, kept out of her berth by the presence of other ships discharging cargo for the same charterers. But, apart from a single sentence in the speech of Lord Sumner, I cannot find anything in the report of the case to lend support to the view that in determining whether charterers bring themselves within an exception of strikes their other commitments must be totally disregarded. The case was tried on an agreed statement of facts, and its difficulties appear to me to have been largely due to the facts not having been stated as clearly as they might have been. It is this circumstance which, in my view, provides the real ratio of the decision -- for three of the members of the House expressed the view that there was nothing in the statement of facts to show that the vessel in question would not have been delayed just as long by the presence of the other vessels ahead of her, even if there had been no strike - see per Lord Parker of Waddington, Lord Sumner and Lord Wrenbury.
Lord Sumner did, however, say this in the course of his speech-and this is the passage relied on – "I think the words "which prevents or delays the discharging" mean strikes which in themselves prevent or delay the discharging of the chartered ship herself. and do not extend to the case of strikes which only prevent the chartered ship from getting into a berth because they prevent some other ship from getting out of that berth". This expression of view, as I have pointed out, was not necessary for the decision of the case. The point made by Lord Sumner does not appear to have been argued - indeed, had it been part of the shipowners' case, it seems inconceivable that they would have admitted the charterers' right to claim any protection at all. In any case I cannot interpret Lord Sumner's words as going so far as to say that in considering a charterers' claim to be protected by and exception of strikes his other commitments must be totally disregarded. [Pp 105-106]
Donovan LJ:
I should, however, say this about the decision in the Marwood case. I think that case is properly to be regarded as one where it was not proved that delay would have been avoided for the six days in dispute had there been no strike. [P 127]
Note 1 Northfield Steamship Co v Compagnie L’Union des Gaz [1912] 1 KB 434; Federal Commerce and Navigation Co. Ltd. v Tradax Export SA [1978] AC 1 [Back] Note 2 [1907] 13 Com. Cas. 161 [Back] Note 3 24 The Times L. R. 640. [Back] Note 7 Cf the finding by Scrutton J in London and Northern Steamship Co Ltd v Central Argentine Railway Ltd that up to 16 February, the Holgate ought to have had coal amounting to 6 days. [Back]