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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> CEL Group Ltd. v Nedlloyd Lines UK Ltd. & Anor [2003] EWCA Civ 1716 (26 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1716.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1716, [2004] 1 Lloyd's Rep 381, [2004] 1 LLR 381 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE ANDREW
SMITH
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALE
and
LORD JUSTICE
CARNWATH
____________________
CEL Group Ltd |
Appellant | |
- and - |
||
Nedlloyd Lines UK Ltd &
Anor |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith
Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421
4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Richard Lord QC (instructed by Prettys) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
SEE ALSO Supplementary Judgment: [2003] EWCA Civ 1716(2) (18 December 2003)
Lady Justice Hale:
The facts
"The TU [Transport Unit] will provide container transport by truck and rail within the United Kingdom excluding Northern Ireland and NEDLLOYD will undertake to forward all their overland transport requirements in this area for execution by the TU for the duration of the Agreement . . . "
CEL confirmed that this represented the intentions of the parties. A new draft was sent on 19 December 1994 which contained the following recital:
"CEL are haulage and transport operators and NLL wish to grant to CEL the exclusive right to provide overland haulage and transportation services . . . within the United Kingdom excluding Northern Ireland on the following terms and conditions . . . "
No formal agreement was concluded then and negotiations 'went off the boil' while the joint venture continued as before.
"The road haulage fleet which will provide the services shall consist of three separate but conjoint sections, namely the 'Dedicated Fleet', the 'Owner Driver Fleet' and the 'Subcontractor Base'. The sections shall be described as follows:
(a) THE DEDICATED FLEET
(i) The Dedicated Fleet shall consist of a minimum of thirty vehicles which shall be supplied by CEL, and dedicated specifically and exclusively to the provision of the NLL services unless agreed to the contrary from time to time by NLL. Within six months of the date hereof CEL hereby covenant with NLL that the Dedicated fleet shall be further enlarged by the additions of further dedicated vehicles of not less than five, or more than ten, in number and further:
(ii) In the event that on any particular day or days NLL shall not require the services of any of the vehicles in the dedicated fleet (as defined in Clauses 4(a)(i) and 4(a)(ii) hereof), NLL shall pay a daily sum to CEL of £160 for each and every one of those vehicles which are surplus to NLL requirements on that day.
(iii) The Dedicated Fleet shall be primarily (but not exclusively) designated to provide the services to accounts designated by NLL as 'Nedlloyd VIP', 'Nedlloyd Premier' and "'Nedlloyd Vulnerable' Accounts". A list of accounts designated under these headings in the sole discretion of NLL, shall be provided to CEL by the Operations Manager of NLL at the commencement of this Agreement and regularly updated thereafter.
(iv) …
(b) THE OWNER DRIVER FLEET
(i) The Dedicated Fleet shall be supplemented by The Owner Drive Fleet ("OD Fleet") which shall consist (unless agreed by mutual consent) of not less than forty 'owner-driver' vehicles, such term being construed in accordance with general commercial practice.
(ii) NLL shall have the unfettered right of veto on an owner-driver being included on the OD Fleet list, and further shall have the right to demand, in its sole discretion, immediate removal of any owner-driver from the OD Fleet list, such demand be acceded to by CEL forthwith.
(c) THE SUBCONTRACTOR BASE
(i) The Dedicated Fleet and the OD Fleet shall be supplemented by a Subcontractor Base ("SCB"). Vehicles in the SCB are to fulfil the balance of the services required by NLL under this Agreement other than those carried out by the Dedicated Fleet or OD Fleet.
(ii) The vehicles in the SCB shall be selected and approved jointly by CEL and NLL with regular reviews regarding cost efficiency and performance.
(iii) NLL shall have the unfettered right of veto on any vehicle being included in the SCB, and further shall have the right to demand, in its sole discretion, immediate removal of any vehicle from the SCB, such demand to be acceded to by CEL forthwith.
The judge's decision
"I look on the law to be that, if a party enters into an agreement which can only take effect by the continuance of a certain existing state of circumstances, there is an implied engagement on his part that he shall do nothing of his own motion to put an end to that state of circumstances, under which alone the arrangement can be operative."
That proposition was accepted by the House of Lords in Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd v Shirlaw [1940] AC 701. Indeed Lord Atkin, at p 717, preferred not to base the proposition on an implied term but upon
"a positive rule of law that conduct of either promiser or the promisee which can be said to amount to himself 'of his own motion' bringing about the impossibility of performance is in itself a breach. If A promises to marry B and before performance of that contract marries C, A is not sued for breach of an implied contract not to marry someone else but for breach of his contract to marry B."
The Stirling v Maitland proposition has been applied by the Court of Appeal in Bournemouth & Boscombe AFC v Manchester United FC, unreported, 21 May 1980, and by Gatehouse J in Orient Overseas Management and Finance Ltd v Nile Shipping Co Ltd, the 'Energy Progress' [1993] 1 Lloyd's Rep 355.
"A person is free to deal with his property as he chooses, and a person is entitled either to carry on his business or to give up his business as he wishes. It would not be right, therefore, to imply in a contract between him and an agent a term that he should not be free to deal with his property as he chooses, or should not be able to continue or to give up his business as he wishes."
The issue before us
(1) The judge's reasoning was circular. He implied a term that NLL would continue to supply work in order to protect a contractual right to such supply, when CEL only had that right by virtue of the term which he implied. He was thus rewriting the parties' bargain, converting what was no more than a promise not to supply work to other hauliers into a promise to maintain a flow of work to CEL.
(2) The facts are closer to the agency line of authorities than to Stirling v Maitland. In Stirling v Maitland, the claimant had a right to be repaid money he had paid out to discharge another's debt by way of commission earned in an insurance agency; the insurance company could not therefore prevent his securing that repayment by transferring their business to another company. In this case there was no right to be supplied with work.
(3) Even if a term could be implied, the term implied by the judge was insufficiently precise to fulfil the normal requirements for such implication: see eg BP Refinery (Westernport) Pty Ltd v Shire of Hastings (1958) 52 ALJR 20 (PC).
(1) It was necessary to construe the terms of the contract. Properly construed, the exclusive right to provide services for NLL meant more than that NLL would not go elsewhere for those services. It gave CEL the right to all the defined haulage work arising in the ordinary course of NLL's business.
(2) The contract has to be construed against its factual matrix. The important background facts here were the long period during which NLL had had a substantial requirement for overland haulage and CEL had exclusively provided the services to meet that requirement, NLL's desire for a dedicated fleet, with the substantial investment which that involved, and for a guarantee of certain levels of service, and the recognition that a formal three year agreement was needed to protect CEL's interests as well as NLL's, to give both parties certainty.
(3) The narrow view taken by NLL was contrary to commercial sense. Business contracts have to make business sense. It is also contrary to the officious bystander test.
Discussion
". . . I have on occasion found it a useful test notionally to write into the contract under consideration a declaratory clause expressing the fact that the parties are not subject to the obligations which would flow from the clause which it is urged should be implied. I think it is useful in this case. We then get a contract reading: 'It is further agreed that Manchester United Football Club will pay a further sum of "27,770 to Bournemouth & Boscombe Football Club when Edward MacDougall has scored 20 goals in first team competitive football for Manchester United . . .provided always that Manchester United shall be under no obligation to afford MacDougall any reasonable opportunity of scoring 20 goals.' It at once becomes clear that the inclusion of the proviso renders this part of the contract 'inefficacious, futile and absurd', to use the words that Lord Salmon used in Liverpool City Council v Irwin [1977] AC 239, at p 262."
Lord Justice Carnwath:
Lord Justice Waller:
SEE ALSO Supplementary Judgment: [2003] EWCA Civ 1716(2) (18 December 2003)