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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 >> Martrade Shipping & Transport GmbH v United Enterprises Corporation [2014] EWHC 1884 (Comm) (12 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/1884.html Cite as: [2015] 1 All ER (Comm) 774, [2015] 1 WLR 1, [2014] WLR(D) 258, [2014] 2 Lloyd's Rep 198, [2014] EWHC 1884 (Comm), [2015] WLR 1, [2014] 1 CLC 985 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
7 Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Martrade Shipping & Transport GmbH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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United Enterprises Corporation |
Defendant |
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Neil Henderson (instructed by Jackson Parton) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Popplewell:
Introduction
The Issue
"Clause 48 – Arbitration
All disputes arising out of this contract which cannot be amicably resolved shall be referred to arbitration in London. Unless the panics agreed upon sole arbitrator the reference shall be to 2 (two) arbitrators, one to be appointed by each parties (sic). The arbitrators shall be members of the LMAA, and the umpire, if appointed shall be a legal man, and shall be Members of the London Maritime arbitrators' Association otherwise qualified by experience to deal with commercial shipping disputes.
The contract is governed by English Law and there shall apply to arbitration proceedings under this clause the terms of the London Maritime Arbitrators' Association current at the time when the arbitration proceedings are commenced.
…
In the event the amount of claim and counterclaim has not exceed US$ 50,000.00 (sic), the parties agree to refer any dispute to a sole arbitrator in accordance with the "LMAA Small Claims Procedure 1989" and any subsequent amendments thereof."
"This Act does not have effect in relation to a contract governed by a law of a part of the United Kingdom by choice of the parties if –
(a) there is no significant connection between the contract and that part of the United Kingdom; and
(b) but for that choice, the applicable law would be a foreign law."
"Our view is that the same factors that we listed in paragraph 21, and possibly also those mentioned in paragraph 22, are sufficient to show that there was a significant connection with this country."
"20. On the basis that they were entitled to the Award they sought, the owners asked for interest on the balance of hire awarded to them under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998. The charterers sought to rely on section 12(1) of that Act, arguing that if the charterparty had not been expressly amended to make it subject to English law (as happened in clause 48 of the charter), the New York arbitration provision in the printed clause 17 would have remained and there would thus have been a clear choice of US law, so English law would not have applied but for the specific choice in clause 48, and therefore the Act could have no application. However, it does not seem to us to follow at all that if the parties had not expressly chosen English law, as they did, they would also not have opted for London arbitration. The presumption must, in fact, be to the contrary.
21. The question then would be what law was to govern, and the choice of London arbitration would be a very powerful indication in favour of English law. The owners also pointed to other factors which, certainly cumulatively, seem to us to reinforce that indication, namely the use of the English language, the fact that the logs to which the charterers were entitled were to be in English, that GA was to be adjusted in London (and English law was to apply to it), that the ship was entered in the London P&I Club, and that the Inter-Club Agreement was incorporated which would be subject to English law. These, in our view, and contrary to the charterers' suggestion that individually and collectively these considerations were "beyond hopeless" are wholly persuasive in favour of a conclusion that English law would have governed absent an express choice. One final consideration: if one asks the question "What other system of law might the charter have been subject to?" there is simply no plausible answer - yet it would have to have a governing law.
22. The owners also sought to say that the fact that the standard for classification purposes was set by Lloyd's Register, and that basic war risk coverage was to be as defined by Lloyd's of London supported their case, but we do not think those are factors to which any weight can be given. However, that does not affect our conclusion on the basis of the other matters we have mentioned.
23. Accordingly, we have no hesitation in concluding that the Act does apply and therefore the owners are entitled to interest at the prescribed rate of 12.75% per annum (being 4.75%, the official rate in June 2005, plus the enhancement of 8%), and we have so awarded."
The arguments
(1) The choice of London arbitration was an irrelevant consideration under either limb of s. 12(1) of the 1998 Act. Section 12(1)(a) requires important factors connecting England to the commercial transaction itself which cannot include choice of jurisdiction or any other indicia of an implied choice of law. Section 12(1)(b) requires the application of Article 4 of the Rome Convention ignoring any indicia of choice of law whether express or implied.
(2) The other factors relied on by the tribunal were not capable of amounting to significant connecting factors under s. 12(1)(a) either singly or cumulatively.
(3) The application of Article 4 of the Rome Convention to the inquiry under s. 12(1)(b) led to the conclusion that the charterparty would be governed by foreign law absent the express choice of English law in clause 48.
(1) The Tribunal's finding that there was a significant connection between the charterparty and England for the purposes of s.12(1)(a) was a finding of fact which is not subject to review upon an appeal (The Baleares [1993] 1 Lloyd's Rep 215, 228).
(2) The London arbitration clause was capable of amounting to a significant connection between the charterparty and England under s.12(1)(a). When considering whether there is a significant connection, there is no need to disregard factors which might be indicia of an implied choice of law such as the arbitration clause.
(3) In any event the other factors relied upon by the tribunal were capable, singly or cumulatively, of amounting to a significant connection between the charterparty and England.
(4) Further or alternatively Section 12(1)(b) was not fulfilled because the Charterers failed to prove that the charterparty would not have been governed by foreign law absent the express choice of English law in clause 48.
Discussion and conclusions
Section 12(1)(a)
"6. Rate of statutory interest.
(1) The Secretary of State shall by order made with the consent of the Treasury set the rate of statutory interest by prescribing—
(a) a formula for calculating the rate of statutory interest; or
(b) the rate of statutory interest.
(2) Before making such an order the Secretary of State shall, among other things, consider the extent to which it may be desirable to set the rate so as to—
(a) protect suppliers whose financial position makes them particularly vulnerable if their qualifying debts are paid late; and
(b) deter generally the late payment of qualifying debts."
(1) Where the place of performance of obligations under the contract is in England. This will especially be so where the relevant debt falls to be paid in England. But it may also be so where other obligations fall to be performed in England or other rights exercised in England. If some obligations might give rise to debts payable in England, the policy considerations underlying the Act are applicable to those debts; and if some debts under the contract are to carry interest at a penal rate, it might be regarded as fair and equitable that all debts arising in favour of either party under the contract should do so.
(2) Where the nationality of the parties or one of them is English. If it is contemplated that debts may be payable by an English national under the contract, the policy reasons for imposing penal rates of interest may be engaged; and if only one party is English, fairness may again decree that the other party should be on an equal footing in relation to interest whether he is the payer or the payee.
(3) Where the parties are carrying on some relevant part of their business in England. It may be thought that persons or companies who carry on business in England should be encouraged to pay their debts on time and not use delayed payment as a business tool even in relation to transactions which fall to be performed elsewhere. Moreover a supplier carrying on business in England may fall within the category identified in s.6(2)(a) of those whose financial position makes them particularly vulnerable to late payment of their debts, although these are not the only commercial suppliers for whose benefit the Act is intended to apply. The policy of the Act may be engaged in the protection of suppliers carrying on business in England, whether financially vulnerable or not, even where the particular debts in question fall to be paid by a foreign national abroad.
(4) Where the economic consequences of a delay in payment of debts may be felt in the United Kingdom. This may engage consideration of related contracts, related parties, insurance arrangements or the tax consequences of transactions.
(1) The charterparty being in the English language provides no relevant connection. English is the first language of many countries and a primary language employed in international trade, whose use betrays no significant connection between the transaction itself and England. If and to the extent that the use of English in a contract may cast light on a choice of law, either generally or by reference to specialist terms or forms, that is not a relevant consideration under section 12(1)(a). Similar considerations apply to the Charterers' entitlement to logs in the English language.
(2) The adjustment of general average in London and in accordance with English law is also not a relevant connection. Insofar as the choice of English law to govern the adjustment might carry with it the application of the 1998 Act to allow penal interest on debts arising out of such adjustment, it is a choice of law clause which falls to be ignored for the purposes of s.12(1)(a), just as does a choice of law clause of more general application to the rights and obligations under the contract. Insofar as what is relied on is the place of adjustment, the provision is simply a choice of forum for the adjustment of a particular subset of potential disputes under the charterparty, and no more capable of being a significant connecting factor than a more general choice of forum clause. Outside the ambit of the subject matter of an average adjustment, its place and proper law have no relevance. Charterparties not infrequently provide for adjustment of general average at a different place and under a different system of law from that which is chosen to apply to the remainder of the charterparty. A choice of England as the place of adjustment of general average, and of English law as its governing law, provides no relevant connection between England and the charterparty as a whole.
(3) The entry of the vessel in a London P & I Club (or perhaps more accurately a P & I Club with London managers who also have offices in Greece and Singapore) is of no real significance. Charterers under a time charter may be interested in the identity of the owners' Club because they may look to the Club to perform liabilities of the owners which fall within the scope of cover. But this does not make it akin to the obligations under a charter falling to be performed by an English party or in England. Of course the Charterers could expect that liabilities falling within the scope of P&I cover might be met directly by the Club. If, for example, the vessel were arrested, or an arrest threatened, the Club might put up security. If the security came to be enforceable the Club would have incurred a debt which might attract the provisions of the 1998 Act. But if so, that would be the result of the separate contract contained in the Club letter of undertaking (whose proper law need not be that of the charterparty).
(4) The NYPE Interclub Agreement provides at paragraph 9 that where it is incorporated into a charterparty, its governing law is to be that of the charterparty. It only has a connection with England by reason of the express choice of English law in clause 48 of the charterparty, which falls to be ignored for the purposes of the inquiry under s.12(1).
(5) The fact that the standard for classification purposes was set by Lloyd's Register (although the vessel was in fact described as Russian Class), and that basic war risk coverage was to be as defined by Lloyd's of London, are not capable of being relevant connecting factors to England.
Section 12(1)(b)
"Article 3 "Freedom of Choice"
A contract shall be governed by the law chosen by the parties. The choice must be express or demonstrated with reasonable certainty by the terms of the contract or the circumstances of the case. By their choice the parties can select the law applicable to the whole or a part only of the contract.
Article 4 "Applicable law in the absence of choice"
(1) To the extent that the law applicable to the contract has not been chosen in accordance with Article 3, the contract shall be governed by the law of the country with which it is most closely connected…
(2) Subject to the provisions of paragraph 5 of this Article, it shall be presumed that the contract is most closely connected with the country where the party who is to effect the performance which is characteristic of the contract has, at the time of conclusion of the contract, his habitual residence or, in the case of a body corporate or unincorporate, its central administration. However, if the contract is entered into in the course of that party's trade or profession, that country shall be the country in which the principal place of business is situated or, where under the terms of the contract the performance is to be effected through a place of business other than the principal place of business, the country in which that other place of business is situated.
(4) A contract for the carriage of goods shall not be subject to the presumption in paragraph 2. In such a contract if the country in which, at the time the contract is concluded, the carrier has his principal place of business is also the country in which the place of loading or the place of discharge or the principal place of business of the consignor is situated, it shall be presumed that the contract is most closely connected with that country. In applying this paragraph single voyage charter-parties and other contracts the main purpose of which is the carriage of goods shall be treated as contracts for the carriage of goods.
(5) Paragraph 2 shall not apply if the characteristic performance cannot be determined, and the presumptions in paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 shall be disregarded if it appears from the circumstances as a whole that the contract is more closely connected with another country."
"(1) Where the law applicable to a contract is the law of any part of the United Kingdom only by choice of the parties (and apart from that choice would be the law of some country outside the United Kingdom) sections 2 to 7 and 16 to 21 of this Act do not operate as part of the law applicable to the contract."
"Mr Doctor challenges that approach. He says that one cannot look to the Rome Convention, and in particular to art 4, in the way that Mr Temple's argument does, because art 4 is expressly dealing with a situation where the parties have not made a choice of law, whereas here the parties have made a choice of law. But for the purposes of applying this part of s.27, one must ignore the actual choice made and deal with the matter on the hypothesis that no such choice had been made. On that hypothesis, art 4 would give the appropriate guidance. The argument advanced by Mr Doctor on that point seems to me, with respect, fallacious.
….
Mr Doctor's initial submission was, that absent the parties express choice of English law the only factor connecting the contracts with England was the choice of jurisdiction clause, which he contended could be looked at separately from the choice of law clause. His argument was this: applying s.27, but ignoring the choice of law clause, the choice of this court for jurisdictional purpose would point to English law being the intended law of the contract.
I cannot accept the argument. It seems to me that it involves an over-refined reading of s.27. Choice of law and choice of jurisdiction do not have to be the same, but it is normally logical and sensible that they should be. Here, the law and jurisdiction clause has in my judgment to be read as a whole. For the purposes of s.27, in determining what law would apply but for the parties' express choice, I must therefore ignore the whole of that clause.
However, even if that clause is to be read as containing two separate and distinguishable parts, and if the right course for me is to ignore the choice of law clause but look at the choice of jurisdiction clause, the argument that the choice of jurisdiction clause amounts to or implies a choice of English law is self-defeating, for that clause would then still fall to be ignored on the principle that s.27 requires one at this stage of the exercise to ignore the choice made by the parties."
"A time charter is a contract for services to be rendered to the charterer by the shipowner through the use of the shipowner's own servants, the master and the crew, acting in accordance with such directions as to the cargoes to be loaded and the voyages to be undertaken as by the terms of the charterparty the charterer is entitled to give them."
Mr Bignall pointed out that the charterer under this or any other time charter would be free not to use the vessel to carry cargoes at all. This largely theoretical possibility does not assist. The main purpose of the charter will, save in exceptional cases, be to enable goods to be carried. But it is not sufficient that the main purpose of the contract is the carriage of goods in this sense. That was so in the ICF case. What matters is that the charterparty is not in nature an undertaking by the owner to carry goods, but an undertaking by the owner to make available to the charterer a vessel and crew for the latter to employ in transporting goods.
Conclusion