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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 >> Raayan Al Iraq Co Ltd & Ors v Trans Victory Marine Inc & Ors [2013] EWHC 2696 (Comm) (23 August 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2013/2696.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2696 (Comm) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL
Royal Courts of Justice Rolls Building 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC24 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
RAAYAN AL IRAQ CO. LTD et al |
Claimant |
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-and - |
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TRANS VICTORY MARINE INC. et al |
Defendant |
____________________
MR. MARK JONES for the Defendant
Hearing date: Friday, 23rd August 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SMITH:
"A number of phases and a number of different potential causative factors...will require careful analysis and Hague Rules regime" if the case comes to trial.
"The carrier shall be discharged of all liability whatsoever in respect of suit unless suit is brought in the proper form and written notice, thereof, received by the carrier...within 12 months in respect of port to port shipment after the delivery of the goods or the date when the goods should have been delivered."
He also says that the defendants are entitled to the protection of a one year time bar under the Hague-Visby Rules. I shall refer in this judgment to the Hague Rules for the sake of simplicity.
(i) A formal claim was presented only in a letter of 18th July 2010.
(ii) UK solicitors became involved only in the last year or so before proceedings were issued.
(iii) There were some without prejudice discussions on two occasions in December 2010 and September 2011.
Mr Butterworth did not dispute Mr Armstrong's evidence that many claims have been settled. He also said that the claimants had not sought to explain their title to sue but does not suggest that the defendants have ever pressed them to do so. Presumably the insurers on both sides recognise that they were dealing with subrogated claims and the identity of the insured on the different bills of lading was not of immediate commercial importance. However, Mr Butterworth states in his evidence:
"That the claimants did not, before issuing the proceedings, write a letter before action and that this was a breach of the commercial court guide and pre-action protocol. In this context he says that the presentation in the particulars of claim of a claim in bailment and tort came as a surprise the discussions having been 'premised' on a Hague Rules analysis."
I do not propose to say much about that because, as I understand it, the negotiations were without prejudice. However, a claim in tort and bailment is not inconsistent with the parties' rights and obligations being governed by a Hague Rules regime. In any case, Mr Butterworth's complaint does not, to my mind, fairly reflect the commercial court guide. The commercial court guide at B3.2 observes that:
"Subject to complying with the Practice Direction and any applicable approved protocol, the parties to proceedings in the Commercial Court are not required, or generally expected, to engage in elaborate or expensive pre-action procedures, and restraint is encouraged."
Mr Butterworth does not explain what purpose would have been served by such a letter. The claims had, no doubt, been discussed by experienced adjusters and the issues ventilated. The protocols are not designed to impose on the parties the expense of (inaudible) procedural hoops and no complaint was made about the absence of a letter before action before particulars of claim were late and the claimants put in the position where they had to make this application. It is said that any issues about title to sue or about the proper defendants might have been clarified but that is speculation. In my experience it is quite often the case that issues about title to sue are not resolved in cases of this kind by the time that proceedings have been brought and are generally resolved, consensually, in the course of proceedings. The point about not sending a letter before action appears to me opportunistic and not a matter that should weigh heavily on the exercise of my discretion.
"The application should be dismissed, the claim struck out and the defendants awarded their costs of the action. The claimants would then be free to try to commence a fresh action. After all, if there is no applicable contractual time limit then the normal six year limitation period would likely apply. Such a limitation period would only expire in late 2015. They should, however, be under no illusion that any such action would be met with a time bar defence."
Later he says this in conclusion:
"The claimants have exposed themselves to a powerful contractual time bar. The court should not deprive the defendants of their substantive rights by granting the claimants the procedural indulgence bearing in mind the overriding objective. There is a cost and time effective solution that preserves the defendants' substantive rights or, at the very least, to the defendants' ability to run a case based on well arguable substantive rights while avoiding the time spent on the action to date going to waste. The defendants can then use costs orders as a sanction if it thinks it appropriate to do so."
In substance, the suggestion was that the present proceedings should be struck out and the defendants left to commence a new action, no doubt using the same procedure because of the claim in that new action.
"On an application for relief from any sanction imposed for a failure to comply with any rules, practice direction or court order, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable it to deal justly with the application, including the need:
(a) for litigation to be conducted efficiently and at proportionate cost; and
(b) to enforce compliance with rules, practice directions and orders."
It goes on to say that an application for relief must be supported by evidence.
The list of considerations that were itemised in the old version of the Rules has gone but, no doubt, all are potentially relevant for the exercise of the power under the new version of the Rules. The defendants say that the change in the Rules reflects an intention that the court should not show the same indulgence to non-compliance with the Rules and orders under them as apparently had been the previous practice or had developed, although this is not immediately apparent from the more succinct version of CPR 3.9 that has been introduced; the indentified considerations always having been relevant to the exercise of the power under CPR 3.9. I accept that this was the intention. Mr Jones cites in support of this what was said in the Court of Appeal in Fred Perry v Brands Plaza Trading [2012] EWCA Civ 224 Lord Justice Lewison cited with approval a paragraph of Sir Rupert Jackson's report which said:
"...courts at all levels have become too tolerant of delays and noncompliance with orders. In doing so, they have lost sight of the damage which the culture of delay and non-compliance is inflicting on the civil justice system. The balance, therefore, needs to be redressed."
Sir Rupert Jackson, on the same case, expressed similar sentiments. He drew attention to the then prospective amendments to Rule 3.9. He says that there was a concern that relief against sanctions was being granted too readily and:
"a culture of delay and non-compliance is injurious to the civil justice system and to litigants generally."
He said that it was anticipated that the revised Rule would come into force on 1st April 2013 and after that date:
"Litigants who substantially disregard court orders or the requirements of the CPR will receive significantly less indulgence than hitherto."
Similar sentiments are reflected in the judgment of Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart in Venulum Property Investments Ltd v Space Architecture Ltd. I observe, however, that that was a case which turned on particular and unusual facts. The application concerned the claim against only two of the defendants, the ninth and tenth defendants, and the court was able to conclude that the claimants were seeking to advance a claim for bad faith that was pleaded in particularly vague terms and commented that that was a course that did not merit indulgence. The Judge also felt able to conclude that the claim against those defendants was weak, a comparable conclusion to which I am unable to make in the present case. Nor do I accept that the change in the Rule or a change in the attitude or approach of the courts to applications of this kind means that relief from sanctions will be refused even where injustice would result. Indeed, Sir Rupert Jackson specifically said in his report that he had considered and rejected the suggestion that non-compliance with deadlines would no longer be tolerated except in exceptional circumstances. He concluded that he did not advocate what he called such an "extreme course...or any approach of that nature."
(1) The position with regard to the administration of justice: The justice as between the parties is not affected by the delay in the service of the particulars or in the failure to apply for an extension of time before rather than after 23rd July 2013, nor does the timing of the application or the failure to serve particulars have impacted upon any other court users or the court's resources, save for the need to deal with this application.
(2) Was the application for relief made promptly? It was. The only delay was because the defendants did not respond promptly to Hill Dickinson's reasonable enquiry as to whether they were taking any point about the delay. They have provided no explanation for not replying more promptly but what matters is that the claimants certainly cannot be criticised.
(3) Was the failure to comply intentional? It was not and it was not suggested that it was.
(4) Is there a good explanation for the failure? The explanation is presented by Mr Armstrong. It was a slip on his part. It is regrettable but by no means egregious.
(5) The extent to which the party in default has complied with other Rules, Practice Directions, court orders or any other relevant pre-action protocol? I consider there has been no relevant breach. I have referred to Mr Jones' observation about there being no pre-action letter. It was said in his submissions that the failure to set out the case in a proper pre-action letter is, one suspects, a symptom of the claimants' wider failure to keep on top of the timetable. I do not so suspect. I rather suspect that those dealing daily with cargo claims which are handled generally by experienced insurers on both sides and so many of which are sensibly settled, would be horrified by the thought of unnecessary additional expense of the kind which the defendants now suggest. Had the defendants really thought a letter of this kind would be useful, I cannot think why they did not ask for it when they knew that proceedings were issued but not served.
"Collusion on the part of all those on the claimant's side of the fence when it came to knowingly purporting to serve out of time and knowing and deciding not to seek an extension of time despite being fully aware and discussing the fact that the deadline had passed. They tried to get away with it, but got caught."
I have already commented and reject upon and rejected the connotation of impropriety. It does seem to me unfortunate that the matter was put in that way. It is also said that if the claimants' position is aggravated because of the need to start fresh proceedings the claimants would be in a position to consider a claim against Hill Dickinson or Websters or both. I find unappealing the thought of the cost of litigation from this incident being extended by secondary litigation involved in apportioning the blame for two days' delay between the claimant's two different advisors and an evaluation of the strength of the time bar point on a hypothetical than an actual basis. The next consideration under the old version of the Rules was whether the failure to comply was caused by the party or his legal representative? I have said sufficient about that. The next consideration is whether a trial date or likely trial date would be affected manifestly? That does not arise.
"Although the present case is concerned with an extension of time for serving particulars of claim, and not with an extension of time for appealing, the underlying logic is the same [as in another case he cited]. If the court is not willing to extend time the action will be at an end because the claimant will not be able to proceed with it any further."
That does not, to my mind, suggest that in some sense suit has not been brought. It merely means an extension of time is required in order for the claimants to take advantage of the suit that was brought before the deadline. There is no question of the court (in the words of Mr Jones): "Stripping the defendants of a contractual time bar." This seems to me the clearest case of granting the claimants' extension. This is not because the court is unconcerned to ensure that Rules and orders are observed because it is unrealistic to think that no litigation solicitor (inaudible) or that justice always requires that indulgence should be refused. In this case a solicitor erred. The error should have been inconsequential. The overriding objective demands that relief be granted and I grant it. It is ironic that, but for changes to the Rules and the Sir Rupert Jackson report designed to save costs, this matter, I have no doubt, would have been dealt with without a hearing and with minimum expense. As it is, costs of something over £21,000 have been incurred by the defendant including about £10,000 by way of counsel's fees. I understand that, mercifully, the claimant's costs have been much more moderate. The defendants' attempts to exploit the error in the way that they have are, to my mind, regrettable. I consider that an oral hearing was unnecessary. Nothing was argued that could not have been presented in a reasonably short letter to the court. Certainly there was no need for the extended timetable and delay to the litigation that the defendants had sought. I very much hope that changes designed to reduce costs will not have the effect of detracting from the sensible cooperation between solicitors which have, for years, characterised litigation in this court and, I dare say in other courts, otherwise the fault of those solicitors who have delayed and caused unnecessary expense in litigation through delay would find manifestation in aggravating the costs on a more routine litigation. Most cargo claims are dealt with on the basis of sensible and proper cooperation between the cargo interest insurers and (inaudible) clubs. If the points of the kind taken by the defendants result from a change in the Rules, far from the changes at reducing costs and delays in litigation of this kind the changes will, regrettably, aggravate them. I grant the application.