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 £1, 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 >> Global Maritime Investments Ltd v STX Pan Ocean Co Ltd [2012] EWHC 2339 (Comm) (08 August 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/2339.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2339 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Global Maritime Investments Limited | Claimant | |
and | ||
STX Pan Ocean Co. Limited | Defendant | |
Global Maritime Investments Limited | Claimant | |
and | ||
Navios International Inc. | Defendant | |
Navios International Inc. | Claimant | |
and | ||
Sangamon Transportation Group | Defendant |
____________________
Julian Kenny (instructed by Reed Smith) for Sangamon
Hearing dates: 20th July 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
a) New Orleans $ 31,920 paid on 11 September 2007;
b) Bridge Port $ 52,080 paid on 10 April 2008;
c) Baltimore $ 50,500 paid on 12 June 2008.
"Clause 1
That the Owners shall provide and pay for all provisions, wages and consular shipping and discharging fees of the Crew: shall pay for the insurance of the vessel, also for the cabin, dock, engine-room and other necessary stores, including boiler water and maintain her class and keep the vessel in a thoroughly efficient state in hull, machinery and equipment for and during the service. With all inspection certificate necessary to comply with current official requirements at ports.
Clause 2
That whilst on-hire the Charterers shall provide and pay for all the fuel except lubrication oil. Port Charges, Canal dues/Tolls (including Bosphorus/Dardenelles), Compulsory/Customary Pilotages, (including Skaw, Belt, Sound, Bosphoros/Dardenelles and Magellan if required by Master and all anchorage pilot), Agencies, Commissions, Consular Charges (except those pertaining to the Crew), and all other usual expenses except those before stated, but when the vessel puts into a port for causes for which vessel is responsible, then all such charges incurred shall be paid by the Owners. Fumigations ordered because of illness of the crew to be for Owners account. Fumigations ordered because of cargoes carried or ports visited while vessel is employed under this charter to be for Charterers account. All other fumigations to be for Charterers account after vessel has been on charter for a continuous period of six months or more. Except fumigations due to vessel and/or vessel's crew. Fumigations on account of ports visited or cargoes carried to be for Charterers' time, risk and expense.
Charterers are to provide necessary dunnage also any extra fittings for a special trade or unusual cargo, but Owners to allow them the use of any dunnage and shifting boards already aboard vessel.
Clause 8
That the Captain shall prosecute his voyage with the utmost despatch, and shall be order the orders and directions of the Charterers as regards employment and agency: and the Charterers are to load, stow, trim, tally, secure and discharge the cargo at their expense under the supervision of the Captain, who is to sign Bills of Lading for cargo as presented, in conformity with Mate's or Tally Clerk's receipts.
Clause 29
Vessel's description
…
OWNERS SEA ROSE MARINE S.A OF MONROVIA, LIBERIA
Clause 111
Mandatory Port Expenses / Services
Any mandatory expenses / port charges including but not limited to immigration, tally clerks, watchmen and garbage removal to be for Charterers' account. It is understood that any immigration charges arising as a result of crew changes will be for the Owners' account.
Clause 112
U.S. Tax Reform 1986 Clause
Any U.S. Gross Transportation Tax as enacted by the United States Public Law 99 – 514, (also referred to as the U.S. Tax Reform Act 1986), including later changes or amendments, levied on income attributable to transportation under this Charter party which begins or ends in the United States, and which income under the laws of the United States is treated as U.S. Source Transportation Gross Income, shall be reimbursed by the Charterers."
[Bold as in original]
"First of all, the new U.S. Tax Law defines the new tax as a Gross Transportation Income tax and good arguments can be put forward in favour of the point of view that the new tax is not an ordinary freight tax but rather an income tax (personal or corporate). What is important to note is that the tax is not levied on the vessel or the cargo but is levied on the shipowner by reference to the monies received from the charterer.
Secondly, the tax is levied on transportation income which is not restricted to ordinary voyage revenues but also applies to time charter and bareboat charter hire.
After proper consultation with legal experts, it was found that one general clause should be sufficient to cover both voyage charter as well as time charter and bareboat charter income.
The following charterparty clause for use with voyage chartering as well as time – and bareboat chartering is, therefore recommended for use forthwith:
"U.S. Tax Reform 1986 Clause
The clause is then set out
What seems to have been the general perception among members is that the only potential liable party for tax is the actual owner of a vessel. However, emphasis should be placed on the fact that in a chain of transactions involving, for instance, bareboat charter arrangements and also time charter agreements, the bareboat charterer and the time charterer may also be exposed to tax. Equally, it should be noted that the taxpayer should not be responsible for any other income than the actual income received under his own contract regardless of whether such tax will be applied to the various charterers in a chartering line.
A simple example may be illustrative of the problem.
A company incorporated in Singapore bareboat charters its vessel to a Filipino company which again time charters out the same vessel to a company based in Hong Kong. The company based in Hong Kong decides to undertake a voyage from Japan to the United States.
The various liable sources involved in this case will include the bareboat charter hire derived by the company incorporated in Singapore, the time charter hire derived by the company based in the Philippines and, finally the freight revenues derived by the company incorporated in Hong Kong trading the vessel to the United States. Irrespective of whether the three companies are owned by residents of Singapore, Philippines or Hong Kong, respectively, they will be subject to U.S. Tax because, as the situation stands at the present, neither of these countries have so far entered into bilateral agreements with the United States.
Therefore, by inserting the above-mentioned Clause in the bareboat charter, the company based in Singapore transfers tax liability for bareboat hire derived to the Filipino company. Again, by inserting the tax clause in the time charter party, the Filipino company transfers tax liability for time charter hire to the company based in Hong Kong and finally by inserting the tax clause in the voyage charter party, the Hong Kong based company transfers tax liability for freight revenues to the actual voyage charterer.
In other words, this clause transfers tax liability from the Owner to the Charterer, be it the bareboat charterer, the time charterer or the voyage charterer, as the case may be.
It should be noted that tax will be transferred on a reimbursed basis according to the wording of the last two lines in the new U.S. Tax Clause, i.e., that "…U.S. source gross transportation income shall be reimbursed by the Charterers". Tax liability in the first instance rests with the taxpayer, be it the actual owner, bareboat charterer, or the time charterer, because they are the parties which have to file the tax return and thereby pay the tax in the first instance. As soon as the actual tax estimates have been calculated by the tax authorities, the taxpayer can seek reimbursement from the charterer."
i) whether the Tribunals were justified in taking the Circular into account in construing the charterparty;
ii) whether the Circular is correct in saying that, if there is a voyage involving a trip to the US and the vessel is the subject of a chain of charters, all the owners, actual or disponent may be liable to pay tax; or
iii) whether, at any rate by 2007, the position was, either at law or in practice, that only the head owner was liable, or only one party was liable, such that the Circular does no more than represent what was in 1988 thought (possibly erroneously) to be the effect of the new law. In the light of that dispute it is necessary to consider what findings the Tribunals have made about the incidence of the tax and whether they are findings as to what the relevant law or practice is, or merely about what it was thought to be.
The relevance of the Circular
"26 The law relating to the construction of contracts has been elucidated in a number of authorities. It is familiar and uncontroversial. It can be summarised briefly as follows:-
a. The object of construing an express term in a contract is to identify and give effect to the intention of the parties to that contract.
b. The intention of the parties is to be identified from the express words which they have used in the contract in the sense which they would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract and in the context in which they appear in the contract.
c. The tribunal should give effect to the express words used by the parties, unless it is obvious from the circumstances in which the contract was made or from the other terms of the contract, that the parties could not have intended the words to have the meaning which they appear on their face to bear and that the parties intended the term to have some other meaning.
The essential question for the tribunal is what the charterparty, read as a whole against the relevant background, would reasonably be understood to mean."
"28 In so far as this circular deals with the incidence of USGTT on the owners and disponent owners in a charterparty chain, it seems to us to be admissible factual evidence of the relevant background. To that extent, this evidence was not challenged. It was clear from the wording of the circular that those on the BIMCO committee that drafted the wording that was reproduced verbatim in clause 112 anticipated that the USGTT would be levied by the American tax authorities directly on each of the owners in a chain of charters and that their draft clause would serve to transfer liability to each owner's direct charterer, but no further. We were satisfied that the wording, as embodied in clause 112 served that purpose. The question for us was whether, as the Owners contended, in a charterparty chain in which clause 112 was incorporated, liability for USGTT cascaded down the chain, with each charterer being liable not only for the USGTT tax due on income received by the disponent owner under their particular charter, but also USGTT due from each owner or disponent owner higher up the chain. The answer was to be determined not by reference to the BIMCO circular, but in how clause 112 was to be construed.
29 As the parties agreed, their intention is to be identified from the express words which they have used in clause 112 in the sense which those words would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available at the time of the contract and in the context in which they appear in the contract.
30 There is no difficulty in identifying the intention of the parties to a charterparty which incorporates clause 112 from the express words used in the clause in the sense which they would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge about the incidence of USGTT which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the charterparty and in the context in which they appear in the charterparty. The background knowledge is to be found in The BIMCO Special Circular. After it was published, that circular would have been reasonably available to any party to a charterparty which involved trading to the USA.
"the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract".
The actual incidence of the tax
"34 As set out in paragraph 9 above, in support of their argument that under clause 112 liability for USGTT cascaded down the charterparty chain, the owners submitted that where charterers and sub-charterers are foreign corporations, as in the present case, United States revenue authorities impose USGTT on head owners. As we noted above, this is not the method of implementation envisioned by the BIMCO Documentary Committee nor, on its true construction, by clause 112. It was clear to us that the wording of that clause reflected the method of implementation anticipated by the Committee; it followed that if the U.S. authorities levied the tax in a different manner, the clause as drafted would not be suitable. Had the parties intended the clause to apply in the manner argued by the Owners, it would have been a simple matter for them to have modified the clause accordingly". [Underlining added]
"USGTT is declared and paid to the U.S. Treasury only once for each voyage or transportation as is apparent from the evidence adduced in this reference. Claims made to the effect that USGTT is levied upon each party in the charter party chain involved in a single voyage have not been evidenced and are not correct."
"20 The Circular provided an example of [sic] whereby the shipowner bareboat chartered his vessel to another company; which in turn time chartered the vessel to a third company; which in turn voyage chartered the vessel to a fourth company. By incorporating the U.S. Tax Reform 1986 Clause in the bareboat charterparty the shipowner transferred the tax liability for the bareboat hire to the bareboat charterer. With the Clause inserted in the time charterparty, the bareboat charterer transferred tax liability for the time charter hire to the time charterer. Finally, by inserting the Clause in the voyage charterparty, the time charterer transferred the tax liability for freight revenues to the voyage charterer that required the vessel to call to a U.S. port. The intention and operation of the Clause is directly applicable to this reference and, to quote the Circular, its purpose is that "...the tax is transferred on a reimbursed basis according to the wording of the last two lines i.e. …'U.S. source gross transportation income, shall be reimbursed by the Charterers.'"
21 The Charterparty incorporated the U.S. Tax Reform 1986 Clause in clause 112. It provides that the Charterers will reimburse the Owners and nowhere does it require the Owners, as disponent owners, to have paid the United States Treasury directly before the clause applies. As is described in paragraph 20 above, provided the clause is incorporated in each of the charterparties down the chain, the eventual liability for the U.S. Freight tax is transferred from the shipowner to the eventual charterer who requires the vessel to carry a cargo to or from a United States port. As the BIMCO circular makes clear, it is important to recognise that the tax liability is transferred only on a "reimbursed basis.""
Clause 112
The Owners' submissions
The Charterers' submissions
"Any taxes on hire earned under this Charterparty or its sub-hires, or sub-freights, freight or cargo to be for Charterers' account except for taxes if any levied on Charter Party hire by the Nation of the vessel, Flag or Ownership."
The Majority Awards
"31 The words of clause 112 "… levied on income attributable to transportation under this Charter party…" (our emphasis), makes it as clear as it is possible to do that it is only USGTT which is levied on income attributable to transportation under the charterparty to which the claimant owner and respondent charterer are a party for which the charterer is liable to the owner. A charterer is not liable for USGTT for which an owner or disponent owner is liable under a charterparty higher up the charterparty chain."
32 This seems to us to be a perfectly sensible provision for distributing the burden of USGTT on each of the charterers in a charterparty chain. It is at least as sensible as imposing the entire burden of USGTT on the charterer at the end of the charterparty chain. In our view, we have to give effect to the express words used by the parties. It is certainly not obvious from the circumstances in which the charterparty was made or from the other terms of the charterparty, that the parties could not have intended the words in clause 112 to have the meaning which they appear on their face to bear and that the parties intended the term to have some other meaning.
33 To accept the Owner's case on this issue would require one to read clause 112 as if the words quoted and underlined in paragraph 31 were not there. This was a carefully drafted clause produced by BIMCO for general use in all types of charterparty. There can be no conceivable reason for concluding that the parties who incorporated clause 112 did not intend the words used to bear their obvious and natural meaning."
Conclusion
The Award in the Pan Ocean arbitration
"….in a chain of transactions involving, for instance, bareboat charter arrangements and also time charter agreements, the bareboat charterer and the time charterer may also be exposed to tax. Equally, it should be noted that the taxpayer should not be responsible for any other income than the actual income received under his own contract regardless of whether such tax will be applied to the various charters in a chartering line."
"The various liable sources involved in this case will include the bareboat charter hire …the time charter hire…the freight revenues …Irrespective of whether the three companies are owned by residents of Singapore, Philippines or Hong Kong … they will be subject to US Tax.
Tax liability in the first instance rests with the taxpayer, be it the actual owner, bareboat charterer, or the time charterer because they are the parties which have to file the tax return.
…Tax liability in the first instance rests with the taxpayer, be it the actual owner, bareboat charterer, or the time charterer, because they are the parties which have to file the tax return and thereby pay the tax in the first instance."
[Bold added]
Postscript in relation to clause 112
"US source gross transportation income is not just restricted to voyage revenues but also applies to time charter and bareboat charter hire (i.e. at every level of the chartering chain)". [Bold added]
Mr Kenny told me that the minority arbitrator's conclusion was wrong for the following reasons. USGTT is potentially exigible from everyone in the chain in respect of the same voyage. But tax is not necessarily due, because of the exemptions. There is an exemption from the tax, if the company potentially liable has an office in the US or is established in a country with which the US has a Mutual Recognition Treaty[1].
Alternatives to clause 112
Note 1 In the Pan Ocean arbitration the arbitrators recorded (in para 17) the Charterers’ ( i.e. Global Marine’s) claim that every party in the string, with the exception of Sea Rose had places of business in the United States and were not liable to pay USGTT on that account. In the minority Award in the Global Maritime and Navios arbitrations (para 19) it was said to be generally acknowledged that it was extremely difficult to qualify successfully for full exemption. [Back]