![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Haven Insurance Company Ltd v EUI Ltd (t/a Elephant Insurance) [2018] EWCA Civ 2494 (08 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2494.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 2494 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE KNOWLES
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
SIR ERNEST RYDER
LORD JUSTICE HADDON-CAVE
and
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES
____________________
HAVEN INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
EUI LIMITED (T/A ELEPHANT INSURANCE) |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Sa'ad Hossain QC and Ms Joyce Arnold (instructed by Horwich Farrelly Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : Tuesday 16th October 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HADDON-CAVE :
Introduction
The Parties
The Facts
Detailed chronology
MIB's 'custom and practice'
"Article 75(6)(a) …the Member wishing to appeal shall give to the Bureau written notice within 30 days of the issuing of the final version of the minutes of the Technical Committee making the relevant decision".
Judgment below
"33. In my judgment in the present case the points made by Haven are well met in the following quite exceptional circumstances. MIB itself (by its Mr Armstrong) wrote to Elephant shortly after the meeting of the Committee that "it might be best to await the minutes". Elephant believed, reasonably if wrongly, that to be in accordance with the procedure required by the Articles. Its belief was in line with a widely, if wrongly, accepted interpretation, shared by MIB itself, of the relevant time provision in Art 75. Indeed, as Mr Judd says, when Haven took the point that the appeal was out of time MIB wrote: "It has always been the [Committee's] custom and practice to allow 30 days from the date of final minutes. The final minutes were released to all members on 1 April 2015, allowing 30 days from that date." In the particular context it would not, in my judgment, have been within the "reasonable contemplation of the parties" "when they agreed" the Articles that the time for appeal would be other than that which MIB was, when asked, prepared to state.
34. MIB employees were not lawyers, points out Haven. However they were the employees involved in administering the Article 75 process. And, in terms, Article 75 (which I do not set out in full) does not contemplate that lawyers will be engaged throughout the process.
35. I do not overlook the fact that Mr Judd of Elephant accepts that he was aware from minutes of an earlier meeting of the Committee on 6 June 2013 that a Working Group had identified that the wording of the Articles was insufficiently clear to show that the time for appeal started to run upon the date when the minutes were published. Elephant therefore knowingly took some risk. But this knowledge is in my view eclipsed by the later encouragement from MIB to await the minutes.
36. Haven also contends that it would not be "just" for time to be extended. On the facts of this case, Elephant could have taken legal advice long before it did, argues Haven. Elephant has long known, points out Haven, what the Committee had in fact decided and the discussions that led to the decisions that it was planning to appeal. There has been, says Haven, what it would term an inordinate delay by Elephant in making an application to the Court under section 12 of the Act.
37. Haven also draws attention to the fact that shortly after 15 March 2015, and apparently by 26 March 2015, Haven released its retention in good faith and based on the correct construction of Article 75(6)(a), and did so having confirmed with the MIB secretariat that no appeal had been filed.
38. On the other hand it is still material to keep in mind that the appeal was initiated within 30 days if measured from the date of the minutes, and that the minutes were little over a month after the 24 February 2015 email giving notice of the decision. The length of extension required is from 26 March 2015 (when the time in which to initiate an appeal expired) to 30 April 2015 (when the appeal was initiated). All this, again, against the backdrop of MIB's position on the time for initiating an appeal.
39. I take the development in relation to the release of retention into account but do not consider it should cause Elephant to lose the opportunity to appeal through an extension of time. The release of the retention at that early date was a judgment made by Haven at the time. It appears to have been made without allowing for the jurisdiction of the Court to extend time. No later than 35 days after the retention was released, Haven was clear that Elephant was seeking to appeal, and that has continued to be clear ever since. Elephant has long made clear that if needed it sought an extension of the time, even if that request was directed to the arbitrator and only more recently to the Court.
40. I do not overlook the time that has passed in this matter before the application to extend time was made to the Court, rather than the arbitrator. I have nonetheless reached the conclusion that in the present case it would be just to exercise to extend time in the limited degree required."
Parties' submissions
The Arbitration Act 1996
"1. General principles.
The provisions of this Part are founded on the following principles, and shall be construed accordingly—
(a) the object of arbitration is to obtain the fair resolution of disputes by an impartial tribunal without unnecessary delay or expense;
(b) the parties should be free to agree how their disputes are resolved, subject only to such safeguards as are necessary in the public interest;
(c) in matters governed by this Part the court should not intervene except as provided by this Part."
"12. Power of court to extend time for beginning arbitral proceedings, etc.
(1) Where an arbitration agreement to refer future disputes to arbitration provides that a claim shall be barred, or the claimant's right extinguished, unless the claimant takes within a time fixed by the agreement some step—
(a) to begin arbitral proceedings, or
(b) to begin other dispute resolution procedures which must be exhausted before arbitral proceedings can be begun,
the court may by order extend the time for taking that step.
(2) Any party to the arbitration agreement may apply for such an order (upon notice to the other parties), but only after a claim has arisen and after exhausting any available arbitral process for obtaining an extension of time.
(3) The court shall make an order only if satisfied—
(a) that the circumstances are such as were outside the reasonable contemplation of the parties when they agreed the provision in question, and that it would be just to extend the time, or
(b) that the conduct of one party makes it unjust to hold the other party to the strict terms of the provision in question.
(4) The court may extend the time for such period and on such terms as it thinks fit, and may do so whether or not the time previously fixed (by agreement or by a previous order) has expired.
(5) An order under this section does not affect the operation of the Limitation Acts (see section 13).
(6) The leave of the court is required for any appeal from a decision of the court under this section."
i) Are the circumstances such as were outside the reasonable contemplation of the parties when they agreed the provision in question?
ii) Would it be just to extend the time?
The Arbitration agreement
"THE DOMESTIC REGULATIONS
Article 75. (1) Background to Article 75
(a) The objectives underlying Article 75 are:
(1) to assist the victims of motor accidents;
(2) to further the interests of motor vehicle insurance policyholders with a view to reducing the cost of premiums;
(3) to fulfil the objectives in (1) and (2) in an efficient, economical and expeditious manner, having regard to the interests of Members as a whole.
(b) This Article shall apply in respect of all cases, irrespective of the date of accident (with the exception of those that have already been concluded under the terms of the previous versions of this Article), which may be or have been settled under any agreements entered into by the Bureau for the purposes of satisfying Road Traffic Act Judgments (as defined below).
(c) This Article shall be applied and interpreted impartially by the Technical Committee (or, where relevant, any arbitrator appointed pursuant to paragraphs (5) and (6) of this Article).
(d) This Article shall be applied and interpreted in a pragmatic rather than a strictly legal manner, with a view to furthering the objective set out in paragraph (1)(a) of this Article. …
(5) Disputes
All cases giving rise to a dispute involving the Bureau in relation to the interpretation, application or implementation of this Article 75 or any other matters falling within the powers of the Technical Committee as defied in Article 71 shall be dealt with under the following rules of procedure: […]
(6) Right of Appeal
A Member affected by a decision of the Technical Committee under this Article 75 shall have a right of appeal against such decision in accordance with the following procedure.
(a) The Member wishing to appeal shall give to the Bureau written notice within 30 days of the Member's MIB representative being notified of the decision of the Technical Committee.
(b) The notice of appeal shall be signed by or on behalf of the appellant's MIB representative and shall set out the grounds for appeal. Written arguments and evidence upon which the appeal is based shall accompany the notice of appeal or follow within 30 days."
The Authorities
"[T]he section is concerned not to allow the court to interfere with a contractual bargain unless the circumstances are such that if they had been drawn to the attention of the parties when they agreed the provision, the parties would at the very least have contemplated that the time bar might not apply – it then being for the court finally to rule as to whether justice required an extension of time to be given."
"I should like to reserve my judgment on the possibility of applying section 12[3](2)(a), both in a case of reasonable misapprehension about the scope of the circumstances falling within an arbitration agreement, and in a case of reasonable misapprehension about the need to commence arbitration within a particular time. The construction of a contract is a matter on which even courts can hold very different views, sometimes only resolved at the highest level. To take an example from legal history, if one supposes that, prior to the House of Lords decision in Adamastos Shipping Co. Ltd. v. Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co. Ltd. [1959] A.C. 133, the generally accepted view in commercial circles was shown to have been that accepted by the Court of Appeal in that case, viz. that the Hague Rules were inapplicable to regulate the relations of owner and charterer under a clause like clause 43, or to have been (in common with Devlin J. and two members of the House of Lords) that the application of the Hague Rules must be confined to cargo-carrying voyages, it seems to me at least arguable that a party acting on that view might be able to show that the interpretation subsequently adopted was outside his reasonable contemplation within the meaning of the section." (Emphasis added.)
Analysis
Judge's reasoning
"33. … In the particular context, it would not, in my judgment, have been within the "reasonable contemplation of the parties" "when they agreed" the Articles that the time for appeal would be other than that which MIB was, when asked, prepared to state."
"40. … I have nonetheless reached the conclusion that in the present case it would be just to exercise [the discretion] to extend time in the limited degree required."
Key findings of fact
Appellant's arguments
(1) 'Unilateral mistake'
(2) 'Judge mis-interpreted the "Seki Rolette"'
(3) 'Judge misunderstood MIB's e-mail of 19th February 2015'
"All this, again, against the backdrop of MIB's position on the time for initiating an appeal."
(4) 'Elephant derived no benefit in waiting for final minutes'
(5) 'Negligent omission'
"[I]t would appear quite impossible to characterise a negligence omission to comply with the time bar, however little delay were involved, as, without more, outside their mutual contemplation."
(6) 'Elephant aware of problem with Article 75 wording'
"This was a suggestion for an alteration to the wording to make clearer what was already the case – that the trigger for time for appeal was the publication of the minutes."
(7) 'Unjust to grant extension'
Summary
Conclusion
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES:
SIR ERNEST RYDER, SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS: