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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 >> Bandwidth Shipping Corporation v Intaari [2007] EWCA Civ 998 (17 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/998.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 998, [2008] 1 All ER (Comm) 1015, [2008] Bus LR 702, [2007] ArbLR 7, [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 7 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Queen's Bench Division
Commercial Court
Mr Justice Christopher Clarke
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
____________________
Bandwidth Shipping Corporation |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Intaari |
Respondent |
____________________
Luke Parsons QC and Christopher Smith (instructed by Ince & Co, Hamburg) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 23rd July 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
Introduction
The facts
"8. Had the vessel performed in accordance with the charterparty she would have returned to Cape Town on or about 30th May 2002 and/or she would not have been trapped in ice on or about 30th May 2002 and would not have needed to seek refuge in Muskegbukta.
9. As a result of the matters set out above:
(i) Between 2nd May and 30thMay 2002 there was 5.8 days loss of time or delay.
(ii)Time lost from 19th April 2002 until 30 May 2002 due to the inefficiency of the vessel was properly deducted by the Respondents under clauses 11 (A) and/or 13 of the charterparty.
(iii)The vessel was off hire from 30th May 3002 and/or the Claimants are responsible for any delay thereafter pursuant to [the same clauses].
(iv)Further or in the alternative, during the 5.8 days referred to above and/or from 30th May 2002 the Respondents were deprived of the use of the vessel and the Respondents were entitled to deduct any hire during those periods."
a) gave particulars of how the 5.8 days were made up by letter of 28 May; 59.1 hours were for slow steaming and the remainder were said to be hours lost when the vessel was jammed in the ice on 2, 12/13, 22/23, 30 May and 30 May /1 June 2002.
b) by an amended defence relied on the fact that a different ship called the "Almirante Irizar had returned to open waters on 7th August without a problem".
"(7) Had the Vessel been able to perform in accordance with the charterparty ice-breaking warranty and/or had the Vessel not been unseaworthy, the Vessel would not have been forced to winter in the ice and would have returned to Cape Town at the end of May/beginning of June. The Charterers say that if the Vessel had complied with her warranties she could have departed at any time as demonstrated by the ALMIRANTE IRIZAR which was about to depart on 6th August, when ice conditions would have been more severe than in June or July, despite having an ice breaking capacity inferior to that of the Vessel's warranted capability.
(8) Accordingly, the Charterers are not liable to the Owners for any hire over and above that which the Charterers would have been obliged to pay for the 35 days the Vessel should have taken to complete the voyage. Further, the Owners are in breach of charter and the Charterers are entitled to recover the losses counter-claimed as a result."
"29. The delay encountered getting into Novo, after crossing the Ice Belt was due to the onset of a hurricane; she plainly could not either berth (or stay at berth) in such a wind and hence she "tacked" for two days, as she would have done with or without ice-breaking capacity."
"68. The Charterers ask the Tribunal to find that the vessel would have returned to Cape Town by 24th May (see Gibson paragraph 8.57 G(ii) 2.229) if there had not been a breach of charterparty."
"
16 So the question then is: when would the vessel have
17 returned? There are on this basis a number of
18 possibilities. She could have gone straight back from
19 the 30th, is one possibility. She might have been going
20 back a few days earlier because she was delayed, so she
21 would have been going back from, say, the 27th. Or she
22 might have been going back after the ice abated. Those
23 are the three possibilities. I did them in the wrong
24 order.
25 MR TEARE: Tell me which month you are talking about.
1 MR PARSONS: Yes, sorry. Either you could find that she was
2 trying to turn back a few days before the 30th May; from
3 Novo, because she would have got to Novo a little bit
4 early if she had not got stuck. That is my first case.
5 Second case is --
6 MR PERSEY: She would have gone straight north then because
7 there would have been no hurricane --
8 MR YOUNG [sc. PARSONS]: That is what I am saying. She would have gone
9 straight north. The second one is: that she would have
10 done that on the 28th instead of the 30th because she
11 got delayed getting there.
12 The second one is she would have gone straight north
13 from the 30th.
14 My third case is that she would have gone, if she
15 started going to the west, she would have broken out at
16 some stage or at the latest, once the pressure abated
17 from say the 6th or 7th she would have gone back. Those
18 are the three possibilities.
19 And Mr Gibson -- I have given you the reference --
20 has calculated the length of the route and it is
21 a question of taking that and applying that to one of
22 those dates effectively.
23 MR TEARE: And that is the reference you have taken us to,
24 is it?
25 MR PARSONS: Yes."
"24 MR TEARE: Just going back to paragraph 68. When
25 you say the Charterers asked the Tribunal to find the
1 vessel would have returned to Cape Town by the 24th May,
2 your first case, as you gave me a moment ago, that she
3 might turn back a few days before the 30th May, she is
4 going to arrive back in Cape Town by the 20th May. So
5 I am ignoring -- Mr Gibson says she would get back to
6 Cape Town by the 24th May but that is not your primary
7 case.
8 MR PARSONS: I better just think about that. The problem is
9 I was trying to do this while quantum was being
10 discussed and I had thought we would actually have
11 figures for different dates. Could you bear with me --?
12 MR YOUNG: A ten day ...
13 MR PARSONS: I am afraid I did not grapple with this because
14 I had thought quantum was being dealt with.
15 MR YOUNG: I have some sympathy with my learned friend.
16 MR TEARE: What we need to know in relation to your three
17 cases is an agreed figure for the number of days it
18 would take to get back to Cape Town."
19 MR YOUNG: After getting out of the Ice Belt.
20 MR TEARE: I am looking at page 229 and I cannot find an
21 answer on that page.
22 MR YOUNG: There is not one. I think it was 10 to 15 days.
23 MR PERSEY: Surely you could agree on that and let us know.
24 MR TEARE: Add to date to whatever date you think she would
25 have returned back, if you think that is the case.
1 THE CHAIRMAN: As Mr Persey says, this is not something that
2 needs to be done now and certainly not something that
3 should be done in a rush.
4 MR PERSEY: I think you should agree and send us a letter.
5 If you cannot then set out the parameters and identify
6 where you disagree.
7 MR YOUNG: I agree.
8 MR PARSONS: I agree. Having said those are our three cases,
9 because Mr Gibson has got had a (inaudible) I just need
10 it to see if I have missed something because it sounds
11 as though I have.
12 MR YOUNG: Yes. If it is of any consolation, I think the
13 problem that my learned friend has with Mr Gibson,
14 I think it is why it does not matter, is that the
15 discharging at Mirnyy, because of the thickness of the
16 ice, had to be done by helicopter which then had to be
17 stopped at various times because of weather or
18 visibility. And his calculations did not factor that in
19 at all, nor did he factor in the fact that if the vessel
20 had got into Novo earlier, the hurricane, the first of
21 the two hurricanes, would have hit earlier and so she
22 would have put off the berth then. So I suspect we
23 can -- we can ... well, I suspect we can probably agree
24 things once you have produced your award. No, we
25 cannot. That will not work."
"48. The Charterers' primary case, as clarified in their closing written submissions, was that the vessel would have returned to Cape Town by 24 May had she complied with her ice breaking warranty. In this regard reliance was placed upon a calculation of voyage time by their expert marine engineer, Mr Gibson. It was implicit in this case that the vessel would have left Novo sometime before 30 May (the day on which she in fact left Novo). Their secondary case was that if the vessel would have left Novo on 30 May in any event she would have been able to reach the open sea had she complied with her warranty and would not have been impeded by pressure in the ice, which was in any event intermittent. Their third case was that she should have been able to follow the channels created by ALMIRANTE IRIZAR in July 2002 and thereby reach the open sea. (In their closing oral submissions the third case was put on the basis that the vessel would have broken out of the ice on 7 or 7 June and no mention was made of following ALMIRANTE IRIZAR in August 2002)"
"67. Whilst it is possible that had the vessel complied with her ice breaking warranty her departure from Novo might have had a different outcome from the actual outcome we are not persuaded that this is more likely than not to have been the case."
The Owners' contentions
"The tribunal shall –
(a) act fairly and impartially as between the parties, giving each party a reasonable opportunity of putting his case and dealing with that of his opponent, and
(b) adopt procedures suitable to the circumstances of the particular case, avoiding unnecessary delay or expense, so as to provide a fair means for the resolution of the matters falling to be determined."
"(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award.
A party may lose the right to object (see section 73) and the right to apply is subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant –
(a) failure by the tribunal to comply with section 33 (general duty of tribunal);
. . .
(d) failure by the tribunal to deal with all the issues that were put to it;
. . ."
"The essential function of an arbitrator or, indeed, a Judge is to resolve the issues raised by the parties. The pleadings record what those issues are thought to be and, at the conclusion of the evidence, it should be apparent what issues still remain live issues. If an arbitrator considers that the parties or their experts have missed the real point – a dangerous assumption to make, particularly where, as in this case, the parties were represented by very experienced Counsel and solicitors – then it is not only a matter of obvious prudence, but the arbitrator is obliged, in common fairness or, as it is sometimes described, as a matter of natural justice, to put the point to them so that they have an opportunity of dealing with it."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Gage:
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins: