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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company SA v "Tychy", Owners Of Ship [2001] EWCA Civ 1198 (24 July 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1198.html Cite as: [2001] 2 Lloyd's Rep 403, [2001] EWCA Civ 1198, [2001] 2 LLR 403 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMIRALTY COURT
The Hon Mr Justice David Steel
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Tuesday 24th July, 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD MUSTILL
____________________
MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company SA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Owners of the Ship "TYCHY" |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Dominic Kendrick, QC and Simon Kerr (instructed by Richards Butler for the Respondent)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD PHILLIPS MR.
Introduction
This is the judgment of the Court.
Procedural history
"The Admiralty jurisdiction of the High Court
20(1) The Admiralty jurisdiction of the High Court shall be as follows, that is to say?
(a) jurisdiction to hear and determine any of the questions and claims mentioned in subsection (2)…
(2) The questions and claims referred to in subsection (1)(a) are?
(h) any claim arising out of any agreement relating to the carriage of goods in a ship or to the use or hire of a ship…
21….
(4) In the case of any such claim as is mentioned in section 20(2)(e) to (r) where?
(a) the claim arises in connection with a ship; and
(b) the person who would be liable on the claim in action in personam ("the relevant person") was, when the cause of action arose, the owner or charterer of, or in possession or in control of, the ship,
an action in rem may (whether or not the claim gives rise to a maritime lien on that ship) be brought in the High Court against?
(i) that ship, if at the time when the action is brought the relevant person is either the beneficial owner of that ship as respects all the shares in it or the charterer of it under a charter by demise; or
(ii) any other ship of which, at the time when the action is brought, the relevant person is the beneficial owner as respects all the shares in it."
i) that the claim arose out of an agreement relating to the carriage of goods in a ship or to the use of a ship;
ii) that the claim arose in connection with the ship;
iii) that POL would be liable on the claim in an action in personam;
iv) that when the cause of action arose POL were the charterers of the ship; and
v) that at the time when the writ was issued POL were the beneficial owners of the TYCHY.
(1) Was there a novation of the MoDs in March 1996 under which POL-A replaced POL as slot charterer? If so:(2) Did POL replace POL -A as slot charterer on true construction of the February 1999 Addendum? If so:
(3) Should the February 1999 Addendum be rectified to show that no such agreement was made? If not:
(4) Did liability in rem attach to POL in respect of indebtedness incurred by POL-A before the February 1999 Addendum?
(5) [If the answer to 2 is 'no'] Did the February 1999 Addendum accurately record a free-standing agreement under which POL agreed to discharge POL-A's liabilities, or should it be rectified to a form which imposed no such liability?
(6) Have POL submitted to the jurisdiction of the court to decide issue (5)?
The first round of proceedings
The current proceedings
The March 1996 agreement
"In reference to our telephone conversation of today am I would like to confirm agreement reached by both parties:
1. On 08 March 1996 POL will arrange remittance of $1,731,696.76 being the overdue balance as of 10th March 1996…
2. Effective MSC Claudia VI at Antwerp 31.03.96 and MSC Dominique XI at Antwerp 19.03.96 payment terms will be splitted for westbound and eastbound separately. The credit term to remain as per present agreement i.e. 28 days from the date of call at first loading port. This means that the credit term will be counted as follows
North Atlantic service westbound: 28 days after call at Antwerp
eastbound: 28 days after call at Boston
South Atlantic and Gulf service westbound: 28 days after call at Antwerp
eastbound: 28 days after call at Miami.
3. Effective vessels as per point 2 invoices will be issued for POL-ATLANTIC (and not POL any longer) as with these vessels POL-ATLANTIC is taking over the North Atlantic service from POL which was advised to you earlier this year.
4. If above meets your acceptance please confirm by return so we can effect payment as per point 1 (tomorrow)."
The answer from Mr Formisano by return was in a telex headed 'Re: Credit Terms'. It read:
"Many thanks you message dated March 7th contents of which are being discussed at all internally.
We hereby confirm the agreement as per your message however this facility of extending the credit terms i.e. splitting east/westbound will be immediately be withdrawn on old system will be applied if POL fail to pay in due time the invoice as per existing date and if POL fail to pay the outstanding facility of US$800,000 due March 31st US$400,000 on April 30th US$400,000. Your reconfirmation will be highly appreciated."
"Mr Osinski's telex focuses on the accounting arrangements as from the sailing of Claudia and Dominique whereby invoices would thereafter be issued to POL-A on 28 day credit terms. Whilst the assertion is made that 'with these vessels POL-ATLANTIC is taking over the North Atlantic service from POL which was advised to you earlier this year' it is very difficult to derive from it any proposal that POL-A should be treated not merely as operating the service but as replacing POL as a party to the MOD, particularly where the telex is headed 'Financial Arrangements'. The answer from Mr Formisano, headed 'Credit Terms', is equally inapt for the purpose of constituting consent to such a proposal.
It may well be that the reference to MSC having been advised 'earlier this year' maybe a mistaken reference to the 1st December letter and was fully perceived as such. But as already explained, that letter contained in effect two proposals, one for POL-A to be the operator and the second for POL-A to replace POL as a party to the MOD. Accordingly the implications of the telex dated 7th March viewed in isolation remain very confined and I am not persuaded that it is appropriate to regard that telex, together with the reply, as constituting evidence of tri-partite consent to the novation of the contract. Nor am I persuaded that it is appropriate to view the exchange, in the alternative, as a trigger of a novation already established in principle by the despatch of the 1st December letter, the contents thereof being in some way accepted by the absence of any express rejection by MSC of the proposals contained in it."
"No contracts are made in a vacuum: there is always a setting in which they have to be placed. The nature of what is legitimate to have regard to is usually described as 'the surrounding circumstances' but this phrase is imprecise: it can be illustrated but hardly defined. In a commercial contract it is certainly right that the court should know the commercial purpose of the contract and this in turn presupposes knowledge of the genesis of the transaction, the background, the context, the market in which the parties are operating."
"I do not think that the fundamental change which has overtaken this branch of the law, particularly as a result of the speeches of Lord Wilberforce in Prenn v Simmonds [1971] 1 W.L.R. 1381, 1384-1386 and Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 W.L.R. 989, is always sufficiently appreciated. The result has been, subject to one important exception, to assimilate the way in which such documents are interpreted by judges to the common sense principles by which any serious utterance would be interpreted in ordinary life. Almost all the old intellectual baggage of 'legal' interpretation has been discarded. The principles may be summarised as follows.
(1) Interpretation is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract.
(2) The background was famously referred to by Lord Wilberforce as the 'matrix of fact', but this phrase is, if anything, an understated description of what the background may include. Subject to the requirement that it should have been reasonably available to the parties and to the exception to be mentioned next, it includes absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by a reasonable man.
(3) The law excludes from the background the previous negotiations of the parties and their declarations of subjective intent. They are admissible only in an action for rectification. The law makes this distinction for reasons of practical policy and, in this respect only, legal interpretation differs from the way we would interpret utterances in ordinary life. The boundaries of this exception are in some respects unclear. But this is not the occasion on which to explore them.
(4) The meaning which a document (or any other utterance) would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the meaning of its words. The meaning of words is a matter of dictionaries and grammars; the meaning of the document is what the parties using those words against the relevant background would reasonably have been understood to mean."
Lord Hoffmann has recently emphasised that his reference to 'absolutely anything' meant 'absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language in the document would have been understood by a reasonable man' BCCI v Ali [2001] 2 WLR 735 at 749.
i) to demonstrate the nature of the role of the slot charterer under the MoDs. We consider this to be a legitimate exercise and, in large measure, it involves consideration of the MoDs themselves.
ii) to demonstrate that POL and MSC were agreed in principle that a subsidiary of POL would replace POL as contracting party in the MoDs. We consider that this also is a legitimate justification for considering the evidence in question. Indeed, before David Steel J. MSC also sought to rely on this evidence for it demonstrated that, while MSC were agreeable in principle to the proposed novation, they made it clear that this was subject to the provision by POL of a 'back letter' guaranteeing the obligations of its subsidiary. Mr. Kendrick, QC, for MSC urged that this reservation weighed against construing the March 1996 agreement as giving rise to a novation and the Judge accepted the validity of this argument.
Of course the actings of the parties (including any words they use) may be sufficient to show that they made a new contract.
"When the parties have acted in their transaction upon the agreed assumption that a given state of facts is to be accepted between them as true, then as regards that transaction each will be estopped as against the other from questioning the truth of the statement of facts so assumed."
"So here we have available to us - in point of practice if not in law - evidence of subsequent conduct to come to our aid. It is available - not so as to construe the contract - but to see how they themselves acted on it. Under the guise of estoppel we can prevent either party from going back on the interpretation they themselves gave to it."
i) If the exchange of faxes in March 1996 (a) did not, on their true construction, constitute an agreement to a novation or (b) were ambiguous as to whether or not such an agreement was reached, POL can only establish that a novation occurred if they can demonstrate that the conduct of the parties after March 1996 has given rise to an estoppel by convention.
ii) If the exchange of faxes on their true construction constituted an agreement to a novation, the fact, if so it be, that the parties thereafter acted in accordance with that agreement will do no more than provide the Court with the comforting reassurance that its construction of the March 1996 agreement accords with the intention of the parties.
The MoDs
"Slot Chartering
POL will charter from ACL 350 TEUs per sailing in each direction on a 'whether used or not' basis at the Basic Slot Price per Schedule 2.
POL will charter from MSC 450 TEUs per sailing in each direction on a 'whether used or not' basis at the Basic Slot Price per Schedule 2.
Notwithstanding the above financial allocation, the vessel operators will have the right to swap up to 100 TEUs of POL cargo on each other vessels whenever necessary"
A TEU is a twenty foot container unit and a 'slot' is the space on a containership for the equivalent of a TEU.
The meeting in May 1995
"Name of Party in M.O.D.
MSC AGREED THAT IF IN PLACE OF POL, POL'S SUBSIDIARY BECOMES THE OPERATOR ON THE TRANSATLANTIC TRADE THIS SUBSIDIARY WILL BECOME THE PARTY OF M.O.D. INSTEAD OF POL. POL TO PROVIDE MSC WITH BACK LETTER GUARANTEEING THE FULFILLMENT OF THE M.O.D."
"Further to our previous discussions, we would confirm that beginning January 1, 1995 POL will transfer its North America Services to a newly incorporated company POL-ATLANTIC which will be an autonomous entity of the Polish Ocean Lines Group.
The ownership of the new company does remain in the hands of POL, as the mother company, thus ensuring the continuation in all respects of the present agreements concluded between our companies. In particular, we would stress that all POL obligations towards your company will be paid by us in full on mutually agreed terms.
The establishment of POL-ATLANTIC is the result of POL efforts to entirely commercialise their industries in order to become more competitive in the general conditions of free market economy.
At the same time, please, take this letter as an Annex to our Agreement by which POL-ATLANTIC is to be officially entitled to act as the party that replaces POL in our arrangement and co-operation.
The approval of the U.S. Federal Maritime Commission of POL-ATLANTIC activities and operation is expected to be obtained before 15th inst.
For good order's sake, we would add that POL-ATLANTIC will substitute POL as a member of TACA and the Canadian Conferences, and that the present POL agency and port/terminal/stevedoring set-up will be taken over by POL-ATLANTIC with no alteration.
Also, by this opportunity, the management of Polish Ocean Lines take pleasure in expressing sincere thanks for the close relationship and co-operation, hoping that same will be maintained and still more grounded between your goodselves and POL-ATLANTIC."
"Whilst obviously making it clear that POL will transfer to POL-A the operation of the North Atlantic service as from 1st January 1996, the letter is somewhat coy as to POL's perceived status thereafter. The letter emphasises that POL-A is a subsidiary 'thus ensuring the continuation in all respects of the present agreement… in particular we would stress that all POL obligations towards your company will be paid by us in full'. The later passage that the letter be taken as an annex to the MOD whereby POL-A is to be 'officially entitled to act as the party that replaced POL' is equally ambivalent. "
The March 1996 agreement
"…the author of the 1st December letter, Mr Hapko, was not called to give evidence by the Defendants. In contrast, if it be relevant, Mr Aponte's reaction to the letter is exemplified by his evidence in cross-examination at Day 3 pp.12 and 13:
Q. Your understanding of this letter… was… that MSC should do business with the new subsidiary company as if it was Polish Ocean Lines, that Polish Ocean Lines should remain a party supporting the contracts and Polish Ocean Lines would be responsible for Pol-Atlantic. That was your understanding. A. Both. First of all that Polish Ocean Lines would be responsible for the contract and responsible for Pol-Atlantic as well.
Q. On the basis of your understand, you were therefore content to accept this letter as an annex to the MOD's as requested. A. Yes.
Q. You saw no reason not to comply with Polish Ocean Lines' requested. A. As long as they were assuring me of their responsibility under the MOD, I had no problems.
Mr Formisano's reaction was in a similar vein as recorded at Day 1 p.53:
Q. How did you understand that, that it was an offer of the guarantee that you wanted? A. I understand that we continue to with Polish Ocean Lines, okay, and if a change had to happen we were asking for a proper guarantee, okay, and it was up to them, if they were minded to continue to do business with us, to provide with the guarantee - very simple. We had no reason to refuse doing business if they were giving to us the proper guarantee or satisfaction. "
Conduct after the March 1996 agreement
Financial arrangements
"The process of gradual take over of POL operational activities by the newly formed companies has had, as an unavoidable side effect, that mainly the POL income from previously maintained activity is also diminishing step by step."
The letter proposed that POL should clear their indebtedness by a schedule of payments, and continued:
"We hope, that the proposed schedule of payments shall be satisfactory to You and will not affect Your cooperation with POL-ATLANTIC, who from the legal point is a separate entity and from the beginning has been in line with the agreed terms with Your Company."
POL-A take over the container service
Joining TACA
"This is to advise that beginning January 1, 1996 POL will transfer their North Atlantic common service to a new autonomous entity of the Polish Ocean Lines Group with the name of POL-ATLANTIC.
The ownership of the new firm remains in the hands of Polish Ocean Lines as the mother company.
POL-ATLANTIC will be registered in Poland before 29th December, 1995 and the company's head office will be domiciled in POL building in Gdynia with the present address."
Negotiation of contractual variations
"The above prices will give to POL ATLANTIC an economy of about USD 3.5 million which, as you can appreciate, is an enormous amount and which has been granted to your company only in view to keep the actual relation, for sake of good order, we wish to mention that we cannot consider any additional discount and if same is not accepted, we will be compelled to review the entire agreement which, as discussed, will not be beneficial to both of us."
The August 1998 agreement
"Having in mind the problems which have been prevailing since several months in the co-operation between your esteemed Company and POL-ATLANTIC as well as the endeavours of Mr P. Formisano and POL-ATLANTIC Management directed towards consenting on a most favourable solution to both Parties, I think - in my capacity of the General Director of Polish Ocean Lines, owners of POL-ATLANTIC - that we should schedule a meeting at the earliest possible convenience.
On our part, we would propose optionally end of week nr 35 or 36 (in Geneva, if preferred by you).
I think that you will share our opinion that all aspects of our present and future cooperation (mainly economical and financial matters, as also own tonnage deployment) should be discussed and adequate determinations taken."
"NEW AGREEMENT FOR SLOT PAYMENTS BETWEEN MSC MEDITERRANEAN SHIPPING COMPANY S.A. (MSC) AND POL-ATLANTIC (POL)"
It was signed by representatives of MSC and POL-A, but not by Mr Hapko. Under the agreement MSC agreed to reduce the number of slots and POL-A agreed to settle the outstanding indebtedness in 5 monthly instalments and to pay the weekly current invoices as they fell due.
"…it has to be borne in mind that the meeting which led to the agreement was set up by Hapko of POL by his letter of the 7th August which spoke in terms of an agenda to discuss 'all aspects of our future and present co-operation'. This was just as equivocal as to POL's status (whether as a party to the MOD, a guarantor of pronouncements in the letter of 1st December.
Furthermore, while the agenda may have been a broad one, the written agreement was expressly confined to slot numbers and payments. In short, there were mutual promises of payment on the one hand by POL-A of outstanding sums in return for relaxation by MSC of the number of slots required as a minimum. These matters were foursquare within the sphere of interest of POL-A if acting merely as operator of the route and not as the counter party to the MOD."
The February 1999 Addendum
"After your confirmation that you are not interested to proceed with the sale/lease back transaction concerning one of POL ro-ro vessels, the ship was placed on the market and POL is now considering several options and offers.
According to the confirmation received from our parent company Polish Ocean Lines, after transaction is finally concluded funds will be released to POL-ATLANTIC to cover outstanding amount due to MSC.
We hope that above procedure should take about 4-6 weeks."
"Due to very unfavourable market situation (well known to you as well) at the end of '98 and in January of 1999, our payments are not meeting the agreed terms.
We do not deny this fact and at the same time appreciate your patience and understanding. During last 5 years of co-operation we were always able to find solution to the problems and I am convinced that also now in spite of the existing difficulties POL-ATLANTIC will be able to meet its obligations. This is not the standpoint of POL-ATLANTIC only, but Polish Ocean Lines, being very well aware about the present position, is fully supporting our company with the necessary guarantees and funds.
To materialise it Polish Ocean Lines have already approached several financial institutions and some interested companies to enter into financing transactions. Basing on the actual status of negotiations we expect that the funds will be available in 4-6 weeks time. POL guarantees that immediately upon completion of the deal, funds will be released to POL-ATLANTIC. Consequently POL-ATLANTIC will cover the outstanding obligations.
Unfortunately at this stage of POL financial negotiations it would not be possible to proceed with the idea of the mortgage."
"ADDENDUM TO AGREEMENT DATED 12TH AUGUST 1998 BETWEEN MSC MEDITERRANEAN SHIPPING COMPANY S.A. (MSC) AND POL-ATLANTIC
Following the meeting held at Geneva on Friday 12th February 1999 between Mr A. Ruben, Managing Director of POL ATLANTIC, Mr J Barski, Director of Polish Ocean Line, Mr P Formisano, Director of MSC and Mr G Aponte, President of MSC, the following agreement was reached:
In view of Pol Atlantic's inability to pay the accrued outstanding of US$3,614,738.04 as per attached statement of accounts and in view of Pol Atlantic's momentarily inability to pay the weekly slot costs, MSC agreed to assist Pol Atlantic overcoming their cash flow problems as per the following reasons and commitments.
1. Polish Ocean Line and Pol Atlantic gave their undertaking to sell the motor vessel MV TYCHY and/or other assets within a maximum of four to five weeks. The proceeds of such sale will be transferred to MSC up to the total outstanding amount of due invoices at the time when Polish Ocean Lines are ready to make the settlement payment.
2. Until such date, i.e. up to 12th March 1999 or up to 19th March 1999 at the latest, MSC will accept an on account payment of not less than US$100,000 weekly pending the sale of the above vessel.
3. After the above-mentioned period, Polish Ocean Line will settle the balance due to MSC for the slots carried during the 4/5 weeks less the on account payments as mentioned above.
This agreement has been reached in order to help Polish Ocean Lines overcoming their liquidity problems until the sale of the above vessel has taken place.
MSC and Polish Ocean Lines agreed that as from 15th February 1999, Polish Ocean Lines will undertake to buy from MSC the following slots:
? North Atlantic West and Eastbound 150 TEU's weekly + 100 TEUs buffer
? South Atlantic West and Eastbound 75 TEU's weekly + 100 TEUs buffer
? Price as per existing agreement."
i) Having regard to the background to the novation which we have described above, it was inherently unlikely that the parent company would once again wish to take over the operation of the trans-Atlantic trade.
ii) The dealings between the parties before the signing of the Addendum gave no hint that the object of the agreement was that POL should replace POL-A as slot charterers. On the contrary, those dealings suggested that the object of the exercise was to agree a basis upon which the parent would undertake to discharge its subsidiary's debts.
iii) The more natural meaning of the final part of the Addendum was that POL would purchase and pay for slots on behalf of their subsidiary rather than that POL should replace their subsidiary as the contracting party.
iv) While, in construing the Addendum it is not right to have regard to statements of the witnesses that there was no intention to effect a substitution of parties, we can have regard to the fact that, had that been the intention, one would expect some express reference to this in the Addendum