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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 >> Golden Endurance Shipping SA v RMA Watanya SA & Ors [2016] EWHC 2110 (Comm) (15 August 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/2110.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2110 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GOLDEN ENDURANCE SHIPPING SA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) RMA WATANYA SA (2) AXA ASSURANCE MAROC SA (3) WAFA ASSURANCE SA (4) DALIA COMODEX SA |
Defendants |
____________________
Jessica Wells (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan LLP) for the First to Third Defendants
Hearing dates: 23 February, 27 July and 3 December 2015, further written submissions 13 and
28 April 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Phillips :
i) the preliminary issue of whether the Moroccan Judgment should be recognised by this court, so that the claimant is estopped per rem judicatam from pursuing its claim for a declaration of non-liability in these proceedings. The question is whether the claimant has submitted to the jurisdiction of the Moroccan courts (or should be treated as having done so by virtue of its conduct of these proceedings);
ii) if the Moroccan Judgment is not to be recognised, whether the claimant is entitled, on a summary basis, to a declaration of non-liability on the ground that any cargo claim is time-barred pursuant to Article III rule 6 of the Hague Rules, no suit having been brought with one year after the date when the goods were or should have been delivered. The question in that regard is whether either the Moroccan proceedings or the claimant's own claim in these proceedings (both commenced within one year of the relevant date) constitutes valid suit for these purposes.
The terms of the bills of lading
"11. …, the Lomé Bill is on its front page headed up, in the left hand corner "Code Name: 'CONGENBILL': Edition 1978": but on the reverse page, which sets out the Conditions of Carriage, it is recorded "To be used with charter-parties Code Name 'CONGENBILL' Edition 1994". Those Conditions of Carriage recite:
"(1) All terms and conditions, liberties and exceptions of the Charter- Party, dated as overleaf, including the Law and Arbitration Clause, are herewith incorporated.
(2) General Paramount Clause
(a) The Hague Rules contained in the International Convention for the Unification of certain rules relating to Bills of Lading, dated Brussels the 25th August 1924 as enacted in the country of shipment shall apply to this Bill of Lading. When no such enactment is in force in the country of shipment, the corresponding legislation of the country of destination shall apply, but in respect of shipments to which no such enactments are compulsorily applicable, the terms of the said Convention shall apply.
(b) Trades where Hague-Visby Rules apply. . . "
12. The Owendo and Takoradi Bills are in identical form. They both provide similarly in the top left hand corner of the first page by reference to the 1978 Edition and on the reverse page recite the Conditions of Carriage (by reference to the 1978 Edition). The Conditions of Carriage record:
"All terms and conditions, liberties and exceptions of the Charter-Party, dated as overleaf, are herewith incorporated. The Carrier shall in no case be responsible for loss of or damage to cargo arisen prior to loading and after discharging."
The General Paramount Clause is then recited in identical terms to that set out above, and there is also a provision relating to the application of the Hague-Visby Rules, not relevant in relation to any of these three Bills."
i) despite the 'muddle' caused by the reference to different CONGENBILL editions and the absence of a signed charterparty, the Lomé bill was to be construed containing the Law and Arbitration clause set out on its reverse [16] and as referring to the (unsigned) charterparty dated 11 June 2013, which contained a London arbitration and English law clause [18];
ii) although (as was common ground) the Owendo and Takoradi bills did not specifically provide for arbitration and therefore the question of incorporation of an arbitration clause did not arise, those bills did incorporate the other terms of the unsigned charterparty dated 11 June 2013, including the English law clause [14(ii)(a)];
The relevant procedural history
i) that the Insurers, after submitting the claim in Morocco, "went ahead with the arbitration proceeding brought before the Supreme Court in London" (Memorandum of appeal dated 6 May 2015);
ii) that Burton J's judgment "did not permit [the Insurers] to continue with [their] case in relation to these two bills before the Commercial Court in Casablanca" (Memorandum in reply dated 3 September 2015).
"6. It is further averred that the Owners have submitted to the jurisdiction of the Casablanca Commercial Court by reason of, inter alia, the fact that:
(a) The Owners failed to bring any challenge to the jurisdiction of the Casablanca Commercial Court in accordance with the requirements of Moroccan procedural law, and in particular failed to comply with the requirements of Article 16 of the Moroccan Code of Civil Procedure by:
(i) Not making any challenge to the jurisdiction of the court seised prior to making any other procedural or substantive challenges;(ii) not identifying the court, if not the Casablanca Commercial Court, which does have jurisdiction; and/or(iii) not requesting that the case file be transferred to that court;
(b) The only challenge which the Owners did make – that is their submission that the writ filed by the Insurers in the Casablanca Proceedings was not "formally acceptable" – constituted a procedural defence and not a jurisdictional challenge;
(c) The Owners pleaded a substantive defence to the merits of the Insurers' claim in circumstances where this was not required by Moroccan law;
(d) The Owners' appeal against the Casablanca Commercial Court's judgment also fails to challenge the jurisdiction of Moroccan courts but merely reiterates the procedural and substantive defences previously advanced before the first instance court and that consequently the Owners' appeal constitutes a further submission to the jurisdiction of the Moroccan courts, in addition to its submission to the jurisdiction at first instance.
7. In the premises, the Moroccan Judgment is entitled to recognition by the English court and the Owners are consequently estopped per rem judicatam from asserting this claim against the Insurers."
i) the proper form of challenge to the jurisdiction of the Moroccan court where a party relies on an arbitration clause is not to challenge the "competence" of the court but to challenge the "admissibility" of the claim: the claimant had raised an admissibility challenge as its first argument, in accordance with Moroccan procedural requirements. The claimant further asserted that it had no choice but to plead to the merits of the claim, as merits are determined at the same time as admissibility, but did so after and in the alternative to its challenge to jurisdiction.
ii) its appearance in the Moroccan proceedings was to protect or obtain the release of property seized or threatened with seizure in the Moroccan proceedings, namely, the proceeds of the MBEC guarantee.
The preliminary issue: whether the Moroccan Judgment should be recognised
(a) The scope of the argument
(b) The law as to submission to a foreign court by voluntary appearance
33.- Certain steps not to amount to submission to jurisdiction of overseas court.
(1) For the purposes of determining whether a judgment given by a court of an overseas country should be recognised or enforced in England and Wales or Northern Ireland, the person against whom the judgment was given shall not be regarded as having submitted to the jurisdiction of the court by reason only of the fact that he appeared (conditionally or otherwise) in the proceedings for all or any one or more of the following purposes, namely-
(a) to contest the jurisdiction of the court;
(b) to ask the court to dismiss or stay the proceedings on the ground that the dispute in question should be submitted to arbitration or to the determination of the courts of another country;
(c) to protect, or obtain the release of, property seized or threatened with seizure in the proceedings."
"… for so long as the defendant asserted, and is obviously still asserting, as his primary defence that the court has no jurisdiction over him in relation to the merits of the claim, then even if he also takes steps which are purposeful in relation to the merits of the claim, his doing so should not be taken to mean that he has submitted to the jurisdiction for the purposes of the common law of submission, and has abandoned his challenge for the purposes of s.33. The real question for the English court should not be whether the defendant has taken a step in proceedings which prepare for the trial of the merits, but whether he has chosen to abandon his challenge to the jurisdiction. In answering this, the English court is not bound to follow the law of the foreign court on whether a defendant has succumbed to its jurisdiction; and if the defendant had "no real option but to act as it did", as it was put in AES Ust- Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant LLP v AES Ust- Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant JSC, the court may be reluctant to find that it has submitted to the jurisdiction."
"The court will not simply consider whether the steps taken abroad amounted to submission in the English proceedings. The international context requires a broader approach. Nor does it follow from the fact that the foreign court would have regarded steps taken in the foreign proceedings as a submission that the English court will so regard them. Conversely, it does not necessarily follow that because the foreign court would not regard the steps as a submission that they will not be so regarded by the English courts as a submission for the purposes of the enforcement of a judgment of the foreign court. The question whether there has been a submission is to be inferred from all the facts."
(c) Whether the claimant submitted in Morocco notwithstanding s.33(1)(b)
i) the contention pleaded in the Amended Partial Defence that the claimant's case in the Moroccan proceedings that the dispute should be referred to arbitration was a "procedural defence" and not a jurisdictional challenge, resulting in the claimant pleading a substantive case on the merits in Morocco when it did not have to;
ii) the contention (not pleaded but advanced by way of the application to strike out) that it is an abuse of process for the claimant to rely on its case in Morocco as to the incorporation of arbitration clauses given its stance in these proceedings.
(i) The claimant's stance in the Moroccan proceedings
i) Moroccan law distinguishes between "jurisdiction" challenges and "admissibility" challenges;
ii) Jurisdiction challenges relate to a lack of subject-matter or territorial jurisdiction and are governed by articles 16 and 17 of the Civil Procedure Code ("the CPC"). A party bringing such a challenge must indicate which court is competent and request that the file be sent to that court: it is not possible to request transfer to an arbitral tribunal. A jurisdiction challenge must be decided separately and can be appealed, so that a party can make such a challenge without dealing with the substantive merits of the claim;
iii) Admissibility challenges do not relate to the competence of the court to deal with the matter, but to the right of the opposing party to bring the claim, governed by article 49 of the CPC. The court decides issues of admissibility and the merits in the same judgment, so an admissibility challenge cannot, in practice, be made without also engaging on the merits;
iv) A challenge to the admissibility of a claim may be made by relying on an arbitration agreement. Indeed, article 327 of the CPC, dealing with domestic arbitration agreements, provides that a state court must pronounce a claim brought in breach of such an agreement to be inadmissible.
v) The claimant's reliance on the alleged incorporation of arbitration clauses in the bills of lading in the Moroccan proceedings was a challenge to the admissibility of the claim and was dealt with as such by the Casablanca Commercial Court.
i) that the claimant's contention in Morocco that arbitration clauses were incorporated in the Owendo and Takoradi bills of lading was not rational;
ii) that that contention was fundamentally inconsistent with the fact that the claimant had already initiated these proceedings (and not arbitration), rendering the contention unconscionable;
iii) that the claimant did not contest the Moroccan proceedings under article 16 of the CPC on the grounds that the dispute should be heard in England.
i) Dicey suggests (in footnote 280 to the passage from para. 14-073 set out above) that it is "perhaps" an additional requirement that a jurisdiction challenge is rational, but provides no authority for that proposition. Whilst it may be that in an extreme cases where a challenge is so obviously absurd (in the context of the applicable foreign law and procedural rules) that the English court might conclude that the party advancing it has in reality submitted, the mere fact that a challenge might be classed as obviously wrong or even irrational would not in itself justify appear to justify a conclusion that its proponent had chosen to submit. But in any event, there is no basis for an argument based on irrationality in the present case. Me Saïgh set out a detailed justification for the claimant's arguments as to the incorporation of the arbitration clauses as a matter of Moroccan law (notwithstanding the provisions of the Hamburg Convention), arguments which Professor Tabite did not address in his reply, let alone demonstrate to be irrational.
ii) Briggs, at para 7.53, suggests that one reading of the decision of the Supreme Court in Rubin (holding that a party had submitted to the insolvency jurisdiction of the Australian courts by lodging a claim for payment in the administration) would have the effect that a party may be held to have submitted if it would be unconscionable for him to plead that he had not submitted to the jurisdiction of the foreign court. Whether or not that is the true result (and Briggs both doubts it and points out that it would lead to uncertainty), it is clear that the focus is on the position adopted in the foreign court (or broader foreign proceedings) in determining whether there has been a submission in that foreign jurisdiction, not on any inconsistent conduct in England. There is no support in the cases or as a matter of logic for Ms Wells' contention that a party may be held to have submitted in a foreign jurisdiction because of actions in this jurisdiction.
iii) It may be that the claimant could have mounted a prior jurisdictional challenge under article 16 of the CPC on the basis that the dispute should be tried in England, but there was no evidence adduced in that regard. Even if such a challenge could have been made, its availability does not, in my judgment, have any bearing on the question of whether the claimant's admissibility challenge resulted in the claimant submitting.
(ii) The alleged abuse of process
"There is a principle of law of general application that it is not possible to approbate and reprobate. That means that you are not allowed to blow hot and cold in the attitude that you adopt. A man cannot adopt two inconsistent attitudes towards another: he must elect between them and, having elected to adopt one stance, cannot thereafter be permitted to go back and adopt an inconsistent stance …..."
"… We were referred to various textbook passages on election or remedies, waiver and approbation and reprobation. I do not think the present case falls within the letter of any of these doctrines or maxims but each of the doctrines or maxims reflects the unwillingness of the courts to countenance inconsistent conduct by one party where this is prejudicial to the other. It is further to be remembered that in the present case we are concerned not with statements made in the course of commercial dealing or negotiation but formal statements made in the course of invoking the court's jurisdiction, statements which Jalaram now wish to say were false. It seems to me, as the judge, that whether the rule is founded on public policy or justice between the parties this cannot be permitted."
i) Although the claimant commended proceedings in this jurisdiction and has not contended (as a matter of the applicable English law) that the Ownedo and Takoradi bills incorporate an arbitration clause, it has at no time pleaded or positively asserted that those bills do not incorporate such clause, nor that the dispute should not be referred to arbitration.
ii) Indeed, the commencement of English proceedings is not in itself inconsistent with the existence of an arbitration agreement governing the relevant dispute.
iii) The claimant's contention that the Owendo and Takoradi bills did incorporate arbitration clauses was raised as a matter of Moroccan law in the Moroccan proceedings. It is not inconsistent to argue a point as a matter of foreign law whilst recognising (in parallel proceedings) that it would not succeed as a matter of English law.
iv) Further, in order to demonstrate it was not seeking an inconsistent outcome (that is, the dismissal of the Moroccan proceedings in favour of London arbitration but continuing these proceedings rather than arbitrating), the claimant offered an undertaking to this court that it would submit to London arbitration (but on the basis that it would continue to take the time-bar point under the Hague Rules).
(d) Whether the claimant submitted in Morocco notwithstanding s.33(1)(c)
The application for summary judgment
"In any event the carrier and the ship shall be discharged from all liability in respect of all loss or damage unless suit is brought within one year after delivery of the goods or the date when the goods should have been delivered."
(a) The law relating to Article III r. 6
i) In Compania Columbiana de Seguros v Pacific Steam Navigation Co [1963] 1 QB 101 Roskill J stated at p.123C that "… the crucial paragraph in the rule occurs in a rule the whole purpose of which … is to protect shipowners from being subjected to claims for loss of or damage to cargo which have not been promptly made an promptly pursued."
ii) In The Aries (above) Lord Wilberforce, at p.188G, added to his analysis of Article III r.6 that "to provide for the discharge of these claims after 12 months meets an obvious commercial need, namely, to allow shipowners, after that period, to clear their books."
iii) In The Leni [1992] 2 Lloyd's Rep 48 HHJ Diamond QC considered the time- bar in the context of rule 6 as a whole and the Hague Rules as a whole, stating at p.53 1st column:
"The purpose of the Hague Rules was to achieve a balanced compromise between the interests of cargo-owners and the interests of the carriers. There were a number of objectives which art. III r.6 sought to achieve; first, to speed up the settlement of claims and to provide carriers with some protection against stale and therefore unverifiable claims; second, to achieve international uniformity in relation to prescription periods; third, to prevent carriers from relying on 'notice-of-claim' provisions as an absolute bar to proceedings or from inserting clauses in their bills of lading requiring proceedings to be issued within short periods of less than one year… "
iv) In The Finnrose [1994] 1 Lloyd's Rep 559 Rix J expressed the view that the issue of a writ which was never served would not constitute suit, stating at p574: "to permit fresh proceedings … runs counter to the whole purpose of the rule, which is to ensure speedy notification of claims and the prompt pursuit of litigation …"
v) In The Pionier [1995] 1 Lloyd's Rep 223 Phillips J stated, at p.227;
"The object of the Hague Rules time limit is to protect shipowners from stale claims. Provided that a suit is brought by the party entitled to sue before a competent Court which alleges that the ship owner is liable for breach of duty owed in relation to the cargo carried it seems to me that the suit will suffice to satisfy the requirements of the Hague Rules."
(b) Whether the Moroccan proceedings constituted valid suit
i) The Hague Rules represent a compromise between the interests of cargo- owners and carriers under which carriers accepted (unless otherwise agreed) specified obligations and liabilities, subject to specified restrictions, including the time-bar: see The Leni (above) at 52-53.
ii) That compromise would be undermined if proceedings could be brought in a jurisdiction which applied the Hamburg Rules which, Mr Collett asserted (but Ms Wells disputed) are more beneficial to the cargo owners.
iii) Therefore the term "suit" in Article III r.6 must be read as meaning "suit to establish liability under the Hague Rules". Mr Collett, whilst recognising that The Kapetan Markos NL (above) pre-dates the Hamburg rules, prays in aid the following dictum of Parker LJ at p.232 of that decision:
""Discharged from all liability" must mean discharged from all liability under the rules. "Unless suit is brought" must therefore mean unless suit is brought to establish liability under the rules"
(c) Whether the claimant's claim in these proceedings constituted valid suit
i) The dictum of HJ Diamond QC in The Leni (above) to the effect that the carrier would equally be put in notice of the claim irrespective of the identity of the party initiating the steps under Article III r.6. However, Judge Diamond was considering a situation where the wrong person sued the carrier, not a claim by the carrier for a declaration of non-liability.
ii) The decision of the ECJ in The Tatry [1999] QB 515, concluding at p.535 that an action by carriers seeking a declaration of non-liability for cargo damage had the same object as a subsequent claim by cargo owners against the carrier for damages for causing the loss.
Conclusion
i) The preliminary issue is determined in favour of the claimant: the Moroccan Judgment is not entitled to recognition in this jurisdiction as the claimant did not submit to the jurisdiction of the Moroccan courts.
ii) However, the claimant is not entitled to summary judgment on its claim as the Moroccan proceedings did constitute valid suit brought within one year for the purposes of Article III r.6 of the Hague Rules, so that the claimant is not thereby discharged from any liability to the Insurers.