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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 >> Navalmar UK Ltd v Kale Maden Hammaddeler Sanayi Ve Ticart (as "The MV Arundel Castle") [2017] EWHC 116 (Comm) (31 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/116.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 69, [2017] Bus LR 1186, [2017] 2 All ER (Comm) 1033, [2017] 1 Lloyd's Rep 370, [2017] 1 CLC 71, [2017] EWHC 116 (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 :
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NAVALMAR UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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KALE MADEN HAMMADDELER SANAYI VE TICART AS "The MV Arundel Castle" |
Defendant |
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Michael Proctor (instructed by Shaw Lloyd & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1st November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Knowles :
Introduction
"On a proper interpretation of the fixture recap entered into between the parties dated 27 October 2014, if the [owners] had no right to tender notice of readiness outside port limits, what is the meaning of port limits?"
The fixture recap / the charterparty
"[Notice of readiness] to be tendered at both ends even by cable/telex/telefax on vessels arrival at load/disch ports within port limits. The [notice of readiness] not to be tendered before commencement of laydays."
"Otherwise Gencon 94 printed form charter-party with logical amendments on [basis] the terms as per fixture recap."
"If the loading/ discharging berth is not available on the Vessel's arrival at or off the port of loading/discharging, the Vessel shall be entitled to give notice of readiness within ordinary office hours on arrival there …. Laytime or time on demurrage shall then count as if she were in berth and in all respects ready for loading/discharging provided that the Master warrants that she is in fact ready in all respects. Time used in moving from the place of waiting to the loading/ discharging berth shall not count as laytime. …"
The owners' argument
Common law
"… I think it ought to be made clear that the essential factor is that before a ship can be treated as an arrived ship she must be within the port and at the immediate and effective disposition of the charterer and that her geographical position is of secondary importance. But for practical purposes it is so much easier to establish that, if the ship is at a usual waiting place within the port, it can generally be presumed that she is there fully at the charterers' disposal.
I would therefore state what I would hope to the true legal position in this way. Before a ship can be said to have arrived at a port she must, if she cannot proceed immediately to a berth, have reached a position within the port where she is at the immediate and effective disposition of the charterer. If she is at a place where waiting ships usually lie, she will be in such a position unless in some extraordinary circumstances proof of which would lie in the charterer. …
If the ship is waiting at some other place in the port then it will be for the owner to prove that she is as fully at the disposition of the charterer as she would have been if in the vicinity of the berth for loading or discharge."
"… I find it difficult to believe that there would, except perhaps in rare cases, be any real difficulty in deciding whether at any particular port the usual waiting place was or was not within the port. The area within which a port authority exercises its various powers can hardly be difficult to ascertain. Some powers with regard to pilotage and other matters may extend far beyond the limits of the port. But those which regulate the movements and conduct of ships would seem to afford a good indication. And in many cases the limits of the port are defined by law."
"… I do not believe that in practice it is difficult to discover whether a place where ships usually wait their turn for a berth is within the limits of a named port, or outside those limits as is the case with Glasgow and Hull."
The present case
Laytime Definitions for Charterparties 2013
"PORT shall mean any area where vessels load or discharge cargo and shall include, but not be limited to, berths, wharves, anchorages, buoys and offshore facilities as well as places outside the legal, fiscal or administrative area where vessels are ordered to wait for their turn no matter the distance from that area."
"Where charterers and shipowners as part of their bargain have desired to alter the allocation of the risk of delay from congestion at the named port which would otherwise follow from the basic nature of their contract, they have not sought to do so by undermining whatever legal certainty had been attained as to when a voyage stage ends. Instead they have achieved the same result without altering the basic nature of the contract, by inserting additional clauses to provide that time should begin to run for the purposes of laytime or demurrage if, although the voyage stage is not yet ended, the ship is compelled to wait at some place outside the named port of destination until a berth falls vacant in that port. That is why resort is had by shipowners and charterers to the time lost clause and the standard clauses which deal specifically with the individual ports where a usual waiting place for vessels waiting for a berth lies outside the limits of the port."
An additional argument by the charterers
Conclusion