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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 >> ED & F Man Sugar Ltd v Unicargo Transportgesellschaft mbH [2012] EWHC 2879 (Comm) (23 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/2879.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2879 (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 :
____________________
E. D. & F. MAN SUGAR LTD |
Claimants/ Charterers |
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- and - |
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UNICARGO TRANSPORTGESELLSCHAFT mbH |
Defendant/ Owners |
____________________
Mr Nevil Philips (instructed by Waltons & Morse LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 16 October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eder :
"Clause 3: … the said vessel…shall…sail and proceed to 1-2 safe berth(s), 1 safe port (intention Santos) but not south of Paranagua…"
"Clause 6: … The Act of God, perils of the sea, fire on board, in hulk or craft, or on shore, crew, enemies, pirates and thieves, arrests and restraints of princes, rulers and people, collisions, stranding and other accidents of navigation excepted, even when occasioned by negligence, default or error in judgement of the Pilot, Master, mariners or other servants of the Shipowners. Not answerable for any loss or damage arising from explosion, bursting of boilers, breakages of shafts, or any latent defect in the machinery or hull, not resulting from want of due diligence by the Owners of the ship, or any of them, or by the ship's Husband or Manager."
"Clause 19: … At loading port, even if loading commences earlier, laytime for loading to begin at 1400 hours if e-mailed notice of readiness to load is tendered to agents before noon and at 0800 hours next working day if e-mailed notice of readiness is tendered to agents after noon… At loading port(s) in the event of congestion Master has the right to tender notice of readiness at the customary waiting place in ordinary office hours by email to agents whether in berth or not, whether in port or not, whether in free pratique or not, whether customs cleared or not…"
"Clause 28: In the event that whilst at or off the loading place…the loading…of the vessel is prevented or delayed by any of the following occurrences: strikes, riots, civil commotions, lock outs of men, accidents and/or breakdowns on railways, stoppages on railway and/or river and/or canal by ice or frost mechanical breakdowns at mechanical loading plants, government interferences, vessel being inoperative or rendered inoperative due to the terms and conditions of appointment of the Officers and crew time so lost shall not count as laytime."
"The factual background
10. The LADYTRAMP is described as an open-hatch, double-skin bulk carrier built in 2001 with a deadweight capacity of 24,834 metric tons ("mt") on her summer salt water draft of 9.60 meters. The vessel is registered in and flies the flag of Marshall Islands.
11. The events leading to the disputes, as evidenced by copies of contemporaneous correspondence adduced by the parties and from a written Statement made by the agent in Paranagua on 15 July 2011 at the request of the charterers are summarised below.
12. At the time of the fixture, the vessel was discharging at Abidjan in Ivory Coast from where it was due to sail (for Brazil) on 10 or 11 June 2010. On the date of the fixture (9 June 2010), the charterers declared Paranagua as the loading port.
13. In an email dated 4 June 2010, namely a week before the vessel arrived at the loadport, the local agents (MARCON) advised the parties that a fire has occurred at the Compania Brasilliera Logistica A/A terminal (CBL) which, they later said, is the terminal normally used by the charterers and where, they stated, they had initially scheduled the vessel to load. The fire had destroyed the conveyor-belt system linking the terminal to the warehouse rendering it, in the opinion of local experts, inoperable for at least 3 months. They further expressed the view that charterers would need to transfer the cargo intended for the vessel to another terminal.
14. In an email dated 15 June 2010 the agents advised the parties that they were instructed to change the vessel's berthing programme to the Pasa terminal in Paranagua. On the same day the agents emailed the owners directly to say that they had spoken to the charterers and had persuaded them to change the berthing programme to said alternative terminal where "they also have enough cargo". The agents further informed the owners that the Pasa terminal had a long line up and that the contemplated berthing programme would be revised involving a long waiting time.
15. The vessel arrived on 20 June 2010 and tendered notice of readiness to load at 2330 hours. The Statement of Facts showed that in the absence of an available berth the vessel remained off the port until 14 July 2010, when she weighed anchor and entered the inner roads of the port awaiting berthing instructions.
16. In his written statement, Mr Lemos, the agents' Operations Manager, explained that in fact, because the charterers "could not get sugar to the Pasa Terminal as quickly as hoped" yet another berth, the Centro Sul Servicos Maritimos (Centrosul) Terminal, which is adjacent, but unconnected to, the CBL warehouse, was judged to provide the charterers with the fastest option to obtain replacement sugar for loading. An application for berthing at Centrosul terminal was accordingly made to the port authority and the vessel berthed there (and not at the Pasa Terminal) on 15 July 2010. In the event, berth 212, that was ultimately used, was one of the three (212, 213 or 214) where the vessel would have berthed had the fire not taken place. Loading commenced on 18 July 2010 and was completed on 20 July 2010 at which time the vessel sailed for the discharging port in the Black Sea.
17. In accordance with the charter party terms (recital 9) the owners contended that time began to count at 1400 hours on Monday 21 June 2010 and that allowing for rain periods and permissible laytime (23,500 metric tons per weather working day = 3.91666 days) laytime expired at 2353 hours on 25 June 2010. Thereafter the vessel was on demurrage continuously up to 1300 hours on 20 July 2010, when loading was completed."
"Conclusions
60. The parties' submissions in the arbitration ranged far and wide. However, it seemed to us ultimately that there was a short answer to the defences relied on by the charterers to the owners' claim and we shall deal with that before stating our conclusions in relation to the other issues as succinctly as we can.
61. Once Paranagua was declared as the loading port the charterers' obligation was to nominate "1-2 safe berth(s)" at that port. The fact that the fire occurred whilst the vessel was on passage to Paranagua would not in our view mean that the charterers could not, in principle, rely upon an exceptions clause such as Clause 28 (see cases such as Monroe v Ryan). However, as the owners emphasised, the charterers were entitled to nominate any safe berth in the port of Paranagua and in order for them to rely upon the exceptions in Clause 28 to exclude from laytime the time lost as a result of their inability to use the CBL terminal, the CBL terminal would have had to have been named in Clause 4 of the charterparty – so that the charterers were unable (from a legal standpoint) to nominate an alternative berth.
62. We accepted on the evidence that the cargo which the charterers had originally planned to load was stored in a warehouse which was connected by a conveyor belt to the CBL terminal and the adjacent berth. We also accepted that the evidence supported the charterers' contention that this was the berth at which the vessel's local agents had arranged for her to load. Furthermore, we accepted that the fire which broke out on or about 14 June 2010 destroyed the conveyor belt connecting the warehouse and the terminal and rendered the terminal unusable for the better part of four months. However, we could not accept that the fact that the CBL terminal and berth was unusable throughout the relevant period meant that the charterers were unable to perform their obligation to nominate any "safe berth" at the port for the loading of the contractual cargo.
63. The owners accepted that the position might well have been different if there had only been one berth for the loading of sugar cargoes in the port of Paranagua, so that if that berth became unavailable loading was then not possible at the port at the relevant time. However, that clearly did not seem to us to be the case on the available evidence.
64. The charterers argued that once the sugar to be loaded was placed in storage at the CBL terminal, it was not "practically possible" to move it to another terminal so that "to all intents and purposes, there was only one possible berth for the loading of the sugar at Paranagua". That did not seem to us to be the case. On the evidence it seemed to us that there were a number of alternative berths in Paranagua at which the vessel could have loaded.
65. There were references in the contemporaneous correspondence to the fact that there was scope for "persuading the charterers to change the berthing programme" and to the fact that the charterers had "enough cargo" in the Pasa terminal. That was contradicted a year later in the local agent's witness statement but the contemporaneous evidence certainly suggested to us that the charterers had some flexibility in terms of arranging a cargo for this particular vessel. That was no more than we would expect, since the charterers are a major sugar trader and Paranagua is a significant sugar loading port. There was also a reference in the contemporaneous correspondence to that fact that the charterers "could not get sugar to the terminal as quickly as hoped". Ultimately they had to transfer the cargo from the CBL warehouse by trucks to the Centrosul terminal where the vessel actually loaded at berth 212.
66. We could not therefore accept the submission made on the charterers' behalf that the fire and its effects meant that since the cargo had been transferred to the CBL warehouse it became impossible for them to comply with their obligation to nominate a berth where it could be loaded. That being so, we concluded that the charterers were not entitled to invoke the force-majeure provisions in Clause 28 because the only sense in which loading was "prevented or delayed" was that it became impossible to load at berth originally intended; it continued in our view to be possible to discharge their obligation to nominate a safe berth under Clause 4 of the charterparty and they were obliged to do so by nominating an alternative berth.
67. Had we concluded that the charterers were prevented from loading as a result of the fire, we would have seen no reason as a matter of the construction of Clause 28 why, prima facie, the force-majeure exceptions should not have applied to laytime. Whilst it is correct that general exceptions clauses will only apply to laytime if it is clear as a matter of the strict construction of the relevant provision that this is the intention of the parties that certainly seemed to be the effect of Clause 28 in the present case. Our attention was drawn to an unreported decision to the contrary (the judgment of Thomas J in The "Solon") but that was apparently a decision in the context of a strike and it was not clear whether that case was distinguishable on its facts from the present case.
68. However, as the owners emphasised exception clauses such as Clause 28 in any event have to be construed strictly against the party relying upon them and Clause 28 contained no mention of 'fires'. Nor was it easy to see how the phrase "mechanical breakdowns at mechanical loading plants" could apply in the present case, since in common sense terms the inoperability of the conveyor belt appeared to have been the result of physical damage due to the fire rather than the mechanical breakdown.
69. Nor could we accept that decisions by the port authority or other body responsible for the operation of the port of Paranagua to re-schedule the loading or discharging of a vessel in the light of the fire amounted to "government interferences". That phrase was suggestive so far as we were concerned of an embargo or export ban, rather than simply an administrative re-scheduling of cargoes due to a fire.
70. Even if the charterers had been in a position to invoke Clause 28, we concluded therefore that they would nevertheless have faced considerable difficulties in persuading us that they were entitled to rely upon any of the specific force-majeure events set out in that clause."
i) It was the obligation of the Charterers, when loading at the CBL terminal became unusable due to the fire, to nominate an alternative berth and the fact that the CBL terminal was unusable did not mean that the Charterers were unable to perform their obligation to nominate "1-2 safe berths" for loading the contractual cargo (paragraph 62 of the Award). Clause 28 did not apply to that obligation unless the CBL terminal had been "named" in the Charterparty so as to render the Charterers unable (from a legal standpoint) to nominate an alternative berth (paragraph 61 of the Award). There were a number of alternative berths at which cargo could have been loaded (paragraphs 64 and 65 of the Award). As it was not impossible for the Charterers to nominate a "safe berth" where the cargo could be loaded, the only sense in which loading was "prevented or delayed" was that it was impossible to load at the berth originally intended (paragraph 66 of the Award). I will refer to this as "the safe berth point".
ii) Clause 28 made no mention of "fires" as an excepted peril and "in common sense terms", the inoperability of the conveyor belt appeared to have been the result of physical damage due to the fire rather than any mechanical breakdown (paragraph 68 of the Award). I will refer to this as "the fire and mechanical breakdown point".
iii) Any refusal of permission by the Port Authority of Paranagua to vessels to load at the CBL terminal was not "government interferences" which term in Clause 28 related to such things as embargoes and export bans and not simple administrative re-scheduling of cargoes due to a fire (paragraph 69 of the Award). I will refer to this as "the government interference point".
The safe berth point
i) The Charterers cannot rely upon a problem at a berth to which the Vessel was never ordered and which was never nominated (i.e. the CBL terminal);
ii) Once the Pasa terminal or the Centrosul terminal was effectively nominated, such nomination was to be treated as if written in to the Charterparty from the outset (see The Vancouver Strike Cases [1961] 1 Q.B. 42 per Sellers L.J. at p. 86 and per Willmer L.J. at p. 115; The Jasmine B [1992] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 39 per HHJ Diamond QC at p. 42);
iii) As much as that possibly meant that, once a berth was effectively nominated, the Charterers were under no obligation to make a substitute nomination (as the Charterers argue), it also means that the Charterers cannot seek to rely upon Clause 28 as if they had made a different nomination (i.e. the CBL terminal) from the outset.
iv) Thus, the Charterers cannot argue that the delay to the Vessel was the consequence of the fire at the CBL terminal (and thereby bring themselves within Clause 28) in circumstances where (i) the Charterparty stands to be viewed as always having required the Vessel to proceed to the Pasa terminal or the Centrosul terminal, and (ii) there is no finding to the effect that any delay (and consequent loss of time) which resulted from the need to proceed to either of those two terminals was caused by an excepted event within Clause 28.
The fire and mechanical breakdown point
i) The Tribunal's view that the complete destruction of a loading system is not a "mechanical breakdown at mechanical loading plant" because the cause of that destruction was a "fire" is unsupportable and contrary to the reasoning of the Court of Appeal in The Afrapearl [2004] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 305. In that case, the main issue was whether a leak in a pipe was to be regarded as a "breakdown of machinery or equipment in or about the plant of the charterer". In the event, the Court accepted the charterers' argument in that case that the cause of the breakdown is immaterial and that there is a breakdown if the equipment does not function or if it malfunctions. In particular, as stated by Clarke LJ:
"21. It does seem to me that a distinction should be drawn between a breakdown and its cause. To my mind Robert Goff J was right to draw that distinction. As I see it a breakdown of equipment such as the discharge pipe occurs when it no longer functions as a pipe. The cause of the breakdown may be a hole in the pipe or, as here, a gap in way of the flange which prevents the pipe operating as a discharge pipe. The hole may of course be caused in a number of different ways and for a number of different reasons. One of those reasons will commonly be the fault of someone concerned with the operation of the equipment, here the pipe."
ii) Thus, a "mechanical breakdown" is still a "mechanical breakdown" whatever its cause. One thing is certain, it cannot be said that the destruction of a mechanism is not within "mechanical breakdown".
iii) It would be odd, unreasonable and uncommercial, if one had to distinguish between types of mechanical breakdowns according to their cause, which might require difficult and expensive investigations. Thus, perhaps, what would be the case if a mechanical breakdown caused overheating which caused the fire which caused the destruction of the conveyor system? Or what would be the case if operator error caused the mechanical breakdown which caused overheating which caused the fire which caused the destruction? Or what would happen if the operator error was itself caused by the mechanical breakdown of a gauge which misled him into failing to turn on a lubricating oil pump? Investigations of the taxonomy of mechanical breakdowns according to initiating causes are not what parties to a charterparty like this can reasonably be taken to have contemplated, as the Court of Appeal in The Afrapearl made quite clear.
iv) Here, there can be no doubt that the conveyor system was inoperable and had "broken down". That is sufficient to constitute a "mechanical breakdown" within the meaning of Clause 28 regardless of the cause of such breakdown.
v) Further, that conclusion is unaffected by the fact that the conveyor system was destroyed. The words "mechanical breakdown" are wide enough to include destruction. The contrary would lead to surprising results.
"The arbitrator, before whom this point was argued, rejected the contention of the Charterers. He did so saying that he could not see how the words of the clause could be wide enough "to include damage to the jetty and oil pipes resulting from a collision by a vessel. 'Breakdown of machinery or equipment' cannot, even on the most generous of constructions, be regarded as the same as a complete destruction of part of the facility."
...
Mr. Gross had a number of other arguments, and the next one was this. He said that the clause refers to "breakdown of machinery or equipment in or about the plant of the Charterer, Supplier, Shipper or Consignee of cargo". He then turned to the findings of fact in the Award (I have already quoted them) which show that the oil pier was damaged by the tanker Presidente Campos Salles, by reason of a collision between that ship and the oil pier; and he said that that included damage to the jetty and oil pipes and could be regarded as a complete destruction of part of the facility. Now what is plain from these findings of fact is that there was a collision; that the jetty itself suffered substantial damage in view of the time of repair; and that the pipes on the jetty were also damaged at the same time. The complete destruction of part of the facility may well refer to a destruction of part of the jetty itself, and possibly also to destruction of part of the piping.
In those circumstances, I turn back to the clause again, and I ask myself whether what occurred can reasonably be described as a case of a breakdown of machinery or equipment. In my judgment the answer must be in the negative. So far as the damage to the jetty is concerned, I do not see how that can properly be described as breakdown of machinery or equipment. Plainly the jetty is not machinery; plainly it is not equipment. Furthermore, complete destruction of part of the facility would appear to involve something more than a breakdown. In those circumstances I do not see that the words in question are wide enough to embrace what happened in the present case. As I read the Award, I think this is the approach which the arbitrator himself adopted. So, on that simple ground, it seems to me that Mr. Tomlinson's appeal must fail." (emphasis added)
"... There was then canvassed in argument the colloquial use of the word "breakdown" in relation to such things as motorcars, which seemed to indicate that in that context at least the word "breakdown" indicates some inherent defect of the machinery of the car itself which results in the car breaking down, whereas if the car was damaged in collision with another car one would not normally say that the car broke down."
"Now the difficulty with this argument is that, if one looks at the words of the clause, they refer to "breakdown of machinery or equipment". No doubt the words "breakdown of machinery" might be limited, in the appropriate context, to the colloquial expression "breakdown" when used, for example, in relation to the breakdown of a motorcar. But I find it very difficult to apply that expression in relation to equipment other than machinery. In the case for example of an oil jetty, the relevant equipment may include not merely machinery but, for example, pipes; and it seems to me that piping can legitimately be called equipment in or about the plant of the supplier or consignee of the cargo in the context of a charterparty for a tanker. As I read the words "breakdown of machinery or equipment" they must in the present context go beyond the ordinary example of a machine breaking down due to its own inherent defect. Where there has been a breakdown of equipment in the context of this clause I can see no reason why it should not include, for example, a breakage in a pipe, and in those circumstances it is difficult to see why breakdown should be limited in this clause to something involving an inherent defect in the machinery or equipment.
Now that being so, I feel disinclined to accept Mr. Gross' first submission and I feel fortified in that conclusion by a case which Mr. Tomlinson has cited to me, In re An Arbitration between Trade and Leonard & Sons, Limited [1904] 2 KB 377. That case was concerned with different clauses, which provided as follows:
"detention by ice to be for account of charterers, unless caused by breakdown of steamer."
In that case the ship stranded, and had to go for repairs. Having been repaired she then proceeded to St. Petersburg and was unable to proceed further because of ice. The question which arose was whether, given that there was detention by ice, that detention was caused by breakdown of steamer. It was held by Ridley J., whose decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeal, that it was. He said that although the event which caused the damage to the ship was the stranding nevertheless he was prepared, in the circumstances, to say that there was a breakdown of the steamer, it being irrelevant what was the cause of the damage to the ship.
In my judgment, although I am not dealing with the same clause and I must construe this particular clause in its context, here too the cause of the breakdown is immaterial. It could be some external agent, or it could be some internal defect in the machinery or equipment, but if the machinery or equipment does not function, and possibly also if it malfunctions, then there is a breakdown of the machinery or equipment. So I reject the first argument advanced by Mr. Gross."
i) Clause 28 applies "In the event that whilst at or off the loading place ... the loading of the vessel is prevented or delayed by ... mechanical breakdowns at mechanical loading plants, government interferences ... time so lost shall not count as laytime". Given that Clause 28 is intended expressly to provide for exceptions to laytime, it can only have been intended to apply from the time that the Vessel became an arrived ship and the laytime clock started to run. In that regard, Clause 19 of the Charterparty provided for the commencement of laytime as stated, "whether in berth or not". Thus, the laytime clock started to run following arrival (i.e. once the Vessel was at or off the loading place) and in accordance with Clause 19.
ii) In light of this, if it was the intention of the parties simply to provide for a laytime exception in respect of any event (whenever occurring, even if it occurred before the Vessel's arrival) which prevented or delayed loading, it was not necessary to do any more than provide to the effect that "In the event that ... the loading of the vessel is prevented or delayed by ... mechanical breakdowns at mechanical loading plants, government interferences ... time so lost shall not count as laytime". By definition, those words, in combination with the "whether in berth or not" wording of Clause 19, would suffice to achieve that effect.
iii) Against this background, it must be assumed that there was some additional purpose behind the introduction of the words "whilst at or off the loading place" in Clause 28. Those words cannot have been intended simply to signify that the protection of the Clause would commence with the start of laytime, for that was achieved in any event by the other words of the Clause (and Clause 19). Nor can they have been intended to signify that the laytime exceptions to which Clause 28 refers should apply only while the Vessel was at or off the loading place, for that would be unnecessary: by definition, a laytime exception could not apply to any period prior to the Vessel becoming an arrived ship.
iv) In light of this, the words "whilst at or off the loading place" must be understood to refer to the timing of the excepted event, especially given their proximity to the words "In the event that ..." and "... the loading ... of the vessel is prevented or delayed ...". In other words, those words are intended to signify that the excepted event must be one which occurs (i.e. commences) while the Vessel is "at or off the loading place". In this regard, it cannot have been intended that it would suffice for the event to occur prior to the Vessel's arrival and the commencement of laytime, for such an event would not then (i.e. at that stage) be one which "prevented or delayed" loading (for loading would not ever have been possible at that stage) and thereby affected the running of laytime.
v) Against this background, the intention of the parties must have been to restrict the exceptions in Clause 28 to stipulated events which occur while the Vessel is "at or off the loading place" (i.e. after its arrival and the commencement of laytime) and (at that stage) prevent or delay loading. Thus, it is time lost in "the event" (in the sense of "In the event that ...") of the excepted cause occurring while the Vessel is "at or off the loading place" (i.e. after its arrival and the commencement of laytime) and thereby preventing or delaying loading which is excepted. Events occurring prior to the Vessel being "at or off the loading place" (i.e. prior to its arrival and the commencement of laytime) do not qualify.
vi) This construction is consistent with a sensible commercial allocation of risk. The "whether in berth or not" wording of Clause 19 allocates to Charterers the risk of delay following arrival and the commencement of laytime (whether or not the cause of such delay existed prior to the arrival of the Vessel). That risk is only transferred back to Owners upon the occurrence of a stipulated event which (i) takes place after the Vessel has arrived and laytime has commenced, (ii) prevents or delays loading, and (iii) causes a loss of time as a result.
vii) Thus, the inclusion of the words "whilst at or off the loading place" (given their proximity to the words "In the event that ..." and "... the loading ... of the vessel is prevented or delayed ...") produces a more restrictive effect than, for example, Clause 9 of the AmWelsh form (which does not contain restricting words like "whilst at or off the loading place", and which was considered in Carboex). In the present case (where the fire at the CBL terminal occurred some days prior to the arrival of the Vessel (see paras 13 and 62 of the Award)), Clause 28 therefore has no application.
The government interference point
i) It is inherent in paragraph 69 of the Award that the Tribunal thought that the Port Authority did re-schedule the loading of vessels in light of the fire at the CBL terminal. They did not take the reasoning further since they thought that "government interferences" could not, in law, extend to such actions and that those words were limited to such matters as embargoes or export bans.
ii) However, there is no sound basis for the Tribunal's gloss on the words. Was there an "interference"? Was it by an arm of "government"? The precise form of the interference and the precise identity of the governmental arm cannot matter, much as the precise cause of the leaking pipeline in The Afrapearl did not matter. Imagine a vessel is loading at a berth and that loading is interrupted by an order of government which requires an armaments vessel to berth there immediately or because there is a warning of a terrorist attack. It is not easy to see any logical or rational basis for saying that resulting delay was not caused by "government interference". The analogy with the common exception of "restraint of princes" might be apt and, in that connection, see Scrutton, 22 Ed., Art. 123 and Cooke on Voyage Charters 3rd Ed. paras 85.306-307 which show that compliance with an order from a governmental body can bring the case within that exception. Certainly there is nothing in the wording of Clause 28 redolent of (or restrictive to) "embargoes" or "export bans" specifically and the Tribunal did not explain their reasoning.
Conclusion