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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 >> Tidebrook Maritime Corporation v Vitol SA of Geneva ("Front Commander") [2006] EWCA Civ 944 (05 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/944.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 944 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (COMMERCIAL COURT)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MACKIE QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER
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Tidebrook Maritime Corporation |
Appellant/ Claimants |
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- and - |
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Vitol SA of Geneva (The "Front Commander") |
Respondent/Defendants |
____________________
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)
Mr Tim Brenton QC (instructed by Messrs Ince & Co) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
The charterparty terms
"B. Laydays:
Commencing: 9th January 2004 Cancelling: 10th January 2004
H. Total Laytime in Running Hours: See Vitol Voyage Chartering Terms 1(c) attached
I. Demurrage per day: US$95,000.00 or pro rata
1. WARRANTY – VOYAGE – CARGO. The vessel…shall, with utmost despatch, proceed as ordered to Loading Port(s) named in accordance with Clause 4 or so near thereunto as she may safely get (always afloat), and being seaworthy, and having all pipes, pumps and heater coils in good working order, and being in every respect fitted for the voyage, so far as the aforesaid conditions can be achieved by the exercise of due diligence, perils of the sea and any other cause of whatsoever kind beyond the Owner's and/or Master's control excepted, shall load (always afloat), from the factors of the Charterer, a full and complete cargo, of petroleum and/or its products in bulk, not exceeding what she can reasonably stow and carry…and being so loaded shall forthwith proceed, as ordered on signing Bills of Lading direct to the Discharging Port(s), or so near thereunto as she may safely get (always afloat), and deliver said cargo. If heating of the cargo is requested by the Charterer, the Owner shall exercise due diligence to maintain the temperatures requested.
5. LAYDAYS. Laytime shall not commence before the date stipulated in Part I, except with Charterer's sanction…
6. NOTICE OF READINESS. Upon arrival at customary anchorage at each port of loading or discharge, the Master or his agent shall give the Charterer or his agent notice by letter, telegraph, wireless or telephone that the vessel is ready to load or discharge cargo, berth or no berth, and laytime, as hereinafter provided, shall commence upon the expiration of six (6) hours after receipt of such notice, or upon the vessel's arrival in berth…whichever first occurs. However, irrespective of whether the berth is reachable on arrival or not where delay is caused to Vessel getting into berth after giving notice of readiness for any reason over which Charterer has no control, such a delay shall not count as used latime or demurrage. In any event, Charterer shall be entitled to six hours notice of readiness at loading and discharging ports, even if the vessel is on demurrage.
7. HOURS FOR LOADING AND DISCHARGING. The number of running hours specified as laytime in Part I shall be permitted the Charterer as laytime for loading and discharging cargo…Time consumed by the vessel in moving from loading or discharge port ancorage to her loading or discharge berth, discharging ballast water or slops, will not count as used laytime or time on demurrage.
8. DEMURRAGE. Charterer shall pay demurrage per running hour and pro rata for a part thereof at the rate specified in Part I for all time that loading and discharging and used laytime as elsewhere herein provided exceeds the allowed laytime elsewhere herein specified. If, however, demurrage shall be incurred at ports of loading or discharge by reason of fire, explosion, storm or by strike, lockout, stoppage or restraint of labor or by breakdown of machinery or equipment in or about the plant of the Charterer, supplier, shipper or consignee of the cargo, the rate of demurrage shall be reduced by one-half of the amount stated in Part I…"
"31. Operational Compliance Clause.
Owner shall indemnify Charterer for any damages, delays, costs and consequences of not complying with Charterer's voyage instructions given in accordance with the Charterparty…
The vessel shall not tender Notice of Readiness prior to the earliest layday date specified in this Charterparty and laytime shall not commence before 0600 hours local time on the earliest layday unless Charterer consents in writing.
[There was no clause 32 as a result of a deletion.]
33. Early Loading Clause.
If Charterer permits vessel to tender NOR and berth prior to commencement of laydays, all time from berthing until commencement of laydays to be credited to Charterer against laytime and/or time on demurrage. Saved time to be split 50/50 Owners/Charterers."
The agreed facts
"Charterers confirm NOR to be tendered on arrival Escravos, and to berth/load as soon as instructed by terminal."
"Charterers reconfirm that 'Front Commander' to tender NOR on arrival Escravos."
"Front Commander will tender NOR on arrival ie 08 January 0030 and we want her to berth/ commence loading 08 January."
The annexed documents
"33. If Charterer permits vessel to tender NOR and berth prior to commencement of laydays, all time saved from berthing until commencement of laydays to be split 50/50 Owners/Charterers against laytime and/or time on demurrage."
The agreed issues
"I. If or when the NOR given at 00.01 on 8 January 2004 became effective for the purpose of the commencement of laytime.
II. At what date and time laytime commenced.
III. Whether the charterers by their email of 6 or 7 January or by commencing loading consented to laytime commencing prior to the first day of the laycan, which was 9 January."
The judgment below
"14. Laytime is only to commence before the stipulated date with (Clause 5) "the charterer's sanction" and, more explicitly (additional Clause 31) "charterer consents in writing". The question is whether Owners have shown that the emails amounted to that consent in writing. In my judgment they did not. The emails do not give consent explicitly. I do not consider that they give consent implicitly either. The emails confirm that NOR is to be tendered on arrival and that Chareters want the vessel to berth/commence loading early…
16. While the cases cited by Mr Hickey are useful background they are of no direct application. The only question is whether or not the emails constitute consent under Clause 5 and the additional Clause 31. In my view they do not as they are not explicit enough to have the contractual significance claimed by Owners. The points of construction advanced cannot displace what seems to me the clear answer to the central question. It follows that I see no room for the implication of terms as suggested by Mr Davies. The issue is not the terms of the contract but whether there has been consent. His point on berthing fails because of the existence and terms of the additional clauses.
17. It follows that the answers to the 3 issues for determination…are as follows. Laytime commenced at 06.00 on 9 January 2004 as provided by additional Clause 31 of the charterparty. Charterers did not either by their emails or by commencing loading consent to earlier commencement of laytime."
"the only sensible interpretation to be given to the 50/50 wording is that Charterers are to receive later only half the credit given by additional Clause 33 in its unamended form. I agree. Whatever difficulty this presents it is not a justification for departing from Clause 31 and starting laytime earlier."
The submissions on appeal
Discussion (1): the legal background
"…it seems to me that the point is a short one, and I may be wrong but to me it is a simple one. It depends, as points of this kind must depend, on the true construction of the relevant contract…On what seems to me to be plainly the prima facie meaning of the clause, why should it not apply in this case?"
"Given that the discharge of the maize cargo kept the ship at the port for more than two months this proposition [that laytime never started at all] was unlikely to be well received by the arbitrators, and Counsel for the charterers prudently did not advance it, conceding that laytime began to run when the discharge of the maize actually commenced. While this makes good sense, it is not easy to work out precisely how the conclusion should be reached. The arbitrators, who had many live issues to discuss, contented themselves with saying that by commencing discharge the charterers plainly waived any entitlement to a fresh notice of readiness. I confess to some difficulty in finding the necessary elements of a waiver in the bare fact that a discharge was carried out. For example in Pteroti…Since, however, Counsel in the present case are at one in stating that Pteroti sheds no light on the problem now before us I say no more about it, and I am content to accept the charterers' concession without further scrutiny, reserving the point for detailed exploration if it should arise in the future."
Discussion (2): the Vitol clauses 31 and 33.
"31…The vessel shall not tender Notice of Readiness prior to the earliest layday date specified in this Charterparty and laytime shall not commence before 0600 hours local time on the earliest layday unless the Charterer consents in writing.
33. If Charterer permits vessel to tender NOR and berth prior to the commencement of laydays, all time from berthing until commencement of laydays to be credited to Charterer against laytime and/or time on demurrage. Saved time to be split 50/50 Owners/Charterers."
"the commercial context and the purpose of the contractual requirement to serve NOR which is to trigger the charterers' obligation to unload whereby laytime starts to run immediately (in the absence of express provision), or in accordance with a specific regime…"
Conclusion
Lord Justice Scott Baker:
Lord Justice Buxton: