BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Argo Systems FZE v Liberty Insurance (PTE) & Anor [2011] EWHC 301 (Comm) (21 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/301.html Cite as: [2011] 1 CLC 341, [2011] EWHC 301 (Comm), [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 1111, [2011] 2 Lloyd's Rep 61, [2011] Lloyd's Rep IR 427 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LONDON MERCANTILE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ARGO SYSTEMS FZE |
Claimant |
|
and – |
||
1. LIBERTY INSURANCE (PTE) 2. LONDON SPECIAL RISKS LTD |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Michael Davey (instructed by Bugden & Co) for the First Defendant
Hearing dates: 12 and 13 January 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MACKIE QC:
Background
The Policy
"Warranty no release, waivers or "hold harmless" given to Tug and Towers."
The insuring conditions were "as per Institute Voyage Clauses as modified in certain respects." The clauses adopted were those in the edition of 1 October 1983.
"The Vessel is covered subject to the provisions of this insurance at all times and has leave to sail or navigate with or without pilots, to go on trial trips and to assist and tow vessels or craft in distress but it is warranted that the Vessel shall not be towed, except as is customary or to the first safe port or place when in need of assistance, or undertake towage or salvage services under a contract previously arranged by the Assured and/or Owners and/or Managers and/or Charterers. This Clause 1.1 shall not exclude customary towage in connection with loading and discharging."
"This insurance shall not be prejudiced by reason of the Assured entering into any contract with pilots or for customary towage which limits or exempts the liability of the pilots and/or tugs and/or towboats and/or their owners when the Assured or their agents accept or are compelled to accept such contracts in accordance with established local law or practice."
Facts Agreed or not greatly in dispute
" 1.(a) The Tugowner will indemnify the Hirer in respect of any liability adjudged due or claim reasonably compromised arising out of injury or death occurring during the towage or other service hereunder to any of the following persons:
(i) The Master and members of the crew of the Tug and any other servant or agent of the Tugowner;
(ii) The members of the Riding Crew provided by the Tugowner or any other person whom the Tugowner provides on board the Tow;
(iii) Any other person on board the Tug who is not a servant or agent of the Hirer or otherwise on board on behalf of or at the request of the Hirer.
2.(a) The following shall be for the sole account of the Tugowner without any recourse to the Hirer, his servants, or agents, whether or not the same is due to breach of contract, negligence or any other fault on the part of the Hirer, his servants or agents:
i) Loss or damage of whatsoever nature, howsoever caused to or sustained by the Tug or any property on board the Tug.
ii) Loss or damage of whatsoever nature caused to or suffered by third parties or their property by reason of contact with the Tug or their property by reason of contact with the Tug or obstruction created by the presence of the Tug.
iii) Loss or damage of whatsoever nature suffered by the Tugowner or by third parties in consequence of the loss or damage referred to in (i) and (ii) above.
iv) Any liability in respect of wreck removal or in respect of the expense of moving or lighting or buoying the Tug or in respect of preventing or abating pollution originating from the Tug.
The Tugowner will indemnify the Hirer in respect of any liability adjudged due to a third party or any claim by a third party reasonably compromised arising out of any such loss or damage. The Tugowner shall not in any circumstances be liable for any loss or damage suffered by the Hirer or caused to or sustained by the Tow in consequence of loss or damage howsoever caused to or sustained by the Tug or any property on board the Tug.
(b) The following shall be for the sole account of the Hirer without any recourse to the Tugowner, his servants or agents whether or not the same is due to breach of contract, negligence or any fault on the part of the Tugowner, his servants or agents:
i) Loss or damage of whatsoever nature, however caused to or sustained by the Tow.
ii) Loss or damage of whatsoever nature caused to or suffered by third parties or their property by reason of contact with the Tow or obstruction created by the presence of the Tow.
iii) Loss or damage of whatsoever nature suffered by the Hirer or by third parties in consequence of the loss of damage referred to in (i) and (ii) above.
iv) Any liability in respect of wreck removal in respect of the expense of moving or lighting or buying the Tow or in respect of preventing or abating pollution originating from the Tow.
The Hirer will indemnify the Tugowner in respect of any liability adjudged to a third party or any claim by a third party reasonably compromised arising out of such loss or damage but the Hirer shall not in any circumstances be liable for any loss or damage suffered by the Tugowner or caused to or sustained by the Tug in consequence of loss or damage, howsoever caused to or sustained by the Tow.
3. Save for the provisions of Claues 11,12, 13 and 16 neither the Tug owner nor the Hirer shall be liable to the other party for loss of profit, loss of use, loss of production or any other indirect or consequential damage for any reason whatsoever. "
"With respect to the above claim.
1. The Copa Casino was being towed as a single tow only;
2. The Copa Casino had no cargo on board;
3. No release, waivers or hold harmless has been given to Tug or Towers;
The above warranties have been fully complied with."
The Preliminary Issues before the Court
a) Whether the Claimant was in breach of the warranty that no 'hold harmless' had been given to the tug or towers.
b) The plea of waiver/estoppel in relation to the First Defendant's allegation of breach of the 'hold harmless' warranty.
c) The plea of waiver/estoppel in relation to the First Defendant's allegation of breach of the 'no cargo' warranty. [it is now agreed that this shall not be tried as a preliminary issue].
d) The plea of affirmation/waiver/estoppel in relation to each of the First Defendant's allegations of misrepresentation/non-disclosure.
e) The issue whether, assuming it is no longer open to the First Defendant to avoid the policy, the First Defendant can instead sue for damages in relation to the misrepresentations alleged. For the avoidance of doubt, the issues whether the alleged misrepresentations were in fact made, or were negligent, is not to be within the scope of the preliminary issues trial, but only whether in principle the remedy of damages is available to the First Defendant in the alternative to its avoidance claim.
The Trial
(a) "hold harmless warranty"
(b) waiver/estoppel of breach of the 'hold harmless' warranty
"I also reach the same conclusion by a rather different route. Even if, contrary to the view just expressed, one cannot spell out of the without prejudice agreement a formal definition of the matters in suit, I consider that the conduct of Esso, taken as a whole, and including their participation in formulating the terms of the without prejudice agreement, was such that they cannot fairly be allowed to rely on their new point. Whether the principle which leads to this conclusion is expressed in terms of waiver or estoppel does not seem to me of great importance. In either event I would look for conduct of Esso which conveyed that the termination of the contract was not being founded on the shortfall, and for the reliance by Vitol on the impression thus created."
"As to the representation, I agree that absence of protest about a breach or impending breach of contract, taken completely in isolation, will not normally convey a representation that the breach will never be relied upon: see, for example, per Mr Justice Robert Goff in the Post Chaser, [1981] 2 Lloyd's Rep 695. But there was more than silence here. By Mar. 10 Esso were in possession of copy documents which made the shortfall obvious. Two weeks later, they advance three propositions, none of them founded on the shortfall. More than two weeks later still, they were ready to sign an agreement which defined the dispute in terms of those three points, and prescribed the consequences which would follow if they prevailed. To my mind this was a clear intimation that these, and no others, were the arguments on which they were going to rely.I am fortified in this conclusion by the decisions in Bremer Handels-gesellschaft v Mackprang [1979] 1 Lloyd's Rep 221 and the Post Chaser. For, although I am in general sceptical about the utility of citing previous cases on waiver, given that each turns so particularly on its own facts, these decisions do show that explicit reliance on one contention, and the absence of reliance on another, which could have been advanced on facts already known, is capable of being a tacit representation that the latter would not be relied upon".
"A party can represent that he will not enforce a specific legal right by words or conduct. He can say so expressly – this of course he can only do if he is aware of the right. Alternatively he can adopt a course of conduct which is inconsistent with the exercise of that right. Such a course of conduct will only constitute a representation that he will not exercise the right if the circumstances are such as to suggest either that he was aware of the right when he embarked on the course of conduct inconsistent with it or that he was content to abandon any rights that he might enjoy which were inconsistent with that course of conduct."
(a) "Waiver by estoppel (promissory estoppel) involved a clear and unequivocal representation that the reinsurer (or insurer) would not stand on its right to treat the cover as having been discharged on which the insurer (or insured) had relied, in circumstances in which it would be inequitable to allow the reinsurer (or insurer) to resile from its representation. It was of the essence of this plea that the representation had to go to the willingness of the representor to forego its rights. If all that appeared to the representee was that the representor believed that the cover continued in place, without the slightest indication that the representor was aware that it could take the point that cover had been discharged, there would be no inequity in permitting the representor to stand on its rights. Otherwise rights would be lost in total ignorance that they ever existed, and the representee would be in a position to deny the representor those rights in circumstances in which it never had any inkling that the representor was prepared to waive those rights. It was of the essence of the doctrine of promissory estoppel that one side was reasonably seen by the other to be foregoing its rights. There was nothing improbable in such a foregoing of rights, as it might be prompted by considerations as to the preservation of future goodwill.
(b) It was not sufficient to show that the insurer or reinsurer was aware of relevant facts which constituted a breach of warranty. It was necessary to go on to show that the insurer or reinsurer knew, as a matter of law, that the failure to make the number of films stated in the contract constituted a breach of warranty. It was also necessary to show that it appeared to a reasonable person in the position of assured or reinsured that the insurer or reinsurer was so aware and was prepared to forego its rights."
(d) Loss of the right to avoid
Damages for Misrepresentation
"I ought, however, to make clear that even if I had made findings of fact favourable to the Continental on each of the above matters, I would still have declined to grant relief under s. 2(2). Where a contract of reinsurance has been validly avoided on the grounds of a material misrepresentation, it is difficult to conceive of circumstances in which it would be equitable within the meaning of s. 2(2) to grant relief from such avoidance. Avoidance is the appropriate remedy for material misrepresentation in relation to marine and non-marine contracts of insurance. See Arnould, Law of Marine Insurance and Average, 16th edition, vol. 2, p. 626. The rules governing material misrepresentation fulfil an important "policing" function in ensuring that the brokers make a fair representation to underwriters. If s. 2(2) were to be regarded as conferring a discretion to grant relief from avoidance on the grounds of material misrepresentation the efficacy of those rules will be eroded. This policy consideration must militate against granting relief under s. 2(2) from an avoidance on the grounds of material misrepresentation in the case of commercial contracts of insurance." (See also Arnould §§ 17-104 to 17-112).
Conclusion