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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 >> Septo Trading Inc v Tintrade Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 718 (18 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/718.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 718 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Teare
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MALES
and
LORD JUSTICE PHILLIPS
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SEPTO TRADING INC. |
Respondent/Claimant |
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- and - |
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TINTRADE LIMITED |
Appellant/ Defendant |
____________________
Robert Bright QC & Sarah Martin (instructed by Allen & Overy LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6th May 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males:
The contract terms
"As ascertained at loadport by mutually acceptable first class independent inspector, or as ascertained by loadport authorities and witnessed by first class independent inspector (as per local practice at time of loading).
Such result to be binding on parties save fraud or manifest error.
Inspection costs to be shared 50/50 between buyer/seller."
"Where not in conflict with the above, BP 2007 General Terms and Conditions for fob sales to apply."
"1.1 Measurement and Sampling
Measurement of the quantities and the taking of samples and analysis thereof for the purposes of determining the compliance of the Product with the quality and quantity provisions of the Special Provisions shall be carried out in the following manner:
1.1.1 Where the Loading Terminal is operated by the Seller: …
1.1.2 Where the Loading Terminal is not operated by the Seller:
(i) by an independent inspector jointly agreed upon by the Buyer and Seller in accordance with current Approved Industry Practice. All charges of the independent inspector shall be shared equally between the parties and the inspector's report shall be made available to both parties. The Seller shall use all reasonable endeavours to enable the independent inspector so appointed to have full access to the facilities at the Loading Terminal necessary to perform his duties, or;
(ii) should the parties fail to agree upon an independent inspector, or should the Loading Terminal refuse access to any independent inspector appointed by the parties then by the Loading Terminal's own qualified inspector(s) in accordance with good standard practice at the Loading Terminal at the time of shipment.
1.2 Certificates of Quantity and Quality
1.2.1 Provided always the certificates of quantity and quality (or such other equivalent documents as may be issued at the Loading Terminal) of the Product comprising the shipment are issued in accordance with sections 1.2.2 or 1.2.3 below then they shall, except in cases of manifest error or fraud, be conclusive and binding on both parties for invoicing purposes and the Buyer shall be obliged to make payment in full in accordance with Section 30.1 but without prejudice to the rights of either party to make any claim pursuant to Section 26.
…
1.3 Place of Certification
Should it not be customary practice at the Loading Terminal at the time of shipment for measurement and sampling pursuant to Section 1.1 to take place at the Vessel's manifold immediately prior to loading, or should the parties agree otherwise, then it is a condition of the Agreement that the Seller shall be obliged to provide the same quantity and quality of the Product at the Vessel's permanent hose connection as set out in the certificates of quantity and quality so issued."
"Unless otherwise stated in the Special Provisions, the quality of the Product delivered hereunder shall be not inferior to the specification set out in the Special Provisions. …"
It goes on to exclude conditions or warranties as to the description, quality or fitness for purpose of the product and provides that any quality claim must be brought within 45 days of completion of discharge.
The facts
"Quality to be ascertained or witnessed (as per standard practice at load port at time of loading), basis representative composite sample drawn from shore tank(s) before commencement of loading."
Incorporation and inconsistency – the cases
Pagnan v Tradax
"Special terms and conditions contained herein and/or attached hereto shall be treated as if written on such contract form and shall prevail in so far as they may be inconsistent with the printed clauses of such Contract Form."
"It would in my judgment be quite wrong to approach this question of construction with any predisposition to find inconsistency between the special condition and clause 19 [i.e. the prohibition clause]. They are all part of the same contract, and the parties expressly chose to make their contract subject to the terms of GAFTA Form 119. …
On the other hand it is wrong to approach the contract on the assumption that there is no inconsistency. By including the inconsistency clause, the parties have acknowledged that there may be. One should, therefore, approach the documents in a cool and objective spirit to see whether there is inconsistency or not.
The judge found the arguments on this issue finely balanced, but concluded that there was no inconsistency as submitted by the buyers. I agree with his conclusion, but I have less hesitation in reaching it. It is a commonplace of documentary construction that an apparently wide and absolute provision is subject to limitation, modification or qualification by other provisions. That does not make the later provisions inconsistent or repugnant."
"It is not enough if one term qualifies or modifies the effect of another; to be inconsistent a term must contradict another term or be in conflict with it, such that effect cannot fairly be given to both clauses."
"We have therefore merely to consider the printed words of the contract that the special condition is to prevail in so far as it may be inconsistent with the printed clauses of the GAFTA contract form. What is meant by inconsistency? Obviously there is inconsistency where two clauses cannot sensibly be read together, but can it really be said that there is inconsistency wherever one clause in a document qualifies another clause? A force majeure clause, or a strike and lock out clause, almost invariably does qualify the apparently absolute obligations undertaken by the parties under other clauses in the contract; so equally with an extension of time clause, for instance in a building agreement. So equally, with a lease, the re-entry clause qualifies the apparently unconditional demise for a term of years absolute, but no one would say that they were inconsistent.
In my judgment the first task is to see if the clauses can sensibly be read together. If they cannot, there is inconsistency and the special condition is to prevail over the other clause in the printed form. But, if they can be read together, they should be and there is no inconsistency."
Alexander v West Bromwich
"40. An example of a case where such inconsistency was established is Gesellschaft Burgerlichen Rechts v Stockholms Rederiaktiebolag Svea, The Brabant [1967] 1 QB 588 in which McNair J concluded that there was inconsistency in circumstances where one clause would deprive another 'almost entirely' of any effect, thereby effectively, but not completely, emasculating it.
41. An example given by Akenhead J in RWE Npower Renewables v JN Bentley Ltd [2013] EWHC 978 (TCC), and relied upon by the Lender, is where one part of the contract required a building to be painted black and another part stated it should be painted white. That is an example of a clear and literal contradiction between clauses. In my judgment, inconsistency is not limited to such cases. As Pagnan v Tradax makes clear, it extends to cases where clauses cannot 'fairly' or 'sensibly' be read together; not merely cases where they cannot literally be read together. One should approach that question having due regard to considerations of reasonableness and business common sense. As Rix J stated in The Northern Progress [1996] 2 Lloyd's Rep 319 at 330:
'Indeed, it seems to me that the doctrine of the exclusion of terms which do not make sense (and the doctrine of manipulation which is designed to save an appropriate term for incorporation which would otherwise have to be excluded) as well as the doctrine of inconsistency are but aspects of the overall process of arriving at the true intention of the parties in which the concept of rationality and commercial commonsense must play their appropriate and fundamental roles'."
"46. The Borrower refers in particular to the statement of Lord Halsbury LC [in Glynn v Margetson & Co] ([1893] AC 351 at 357) that 'one must reject words, indeed whole provisions, if they are inconsistent with what one assumes to be the main purpose of the contract'. The application of that principle obviously depends upon being able to identify 'the main purpose' (per Lord Halsbury) or the 'main object and intent' (per Lord Herschell) of the contract, which depends on the construction of the contract as a whole considered in its proper context.
47. Glynn v Margetson highlights that the importance or centrality of the specially agreed term being considered may be a relevant consideration. If it sets out what may reasonably be understood to be the main purpose or object of the contract then a printed standard term which is inconsistent with that purpose or object is likely to be found to be a term which cannot 'fairly' or 'sensibly' be read together with it. …"
The judgment
"34. Assisted by the guidance given by Bingham LJ and approaching the matter in, I hope, a sufficiently cool and objective manner I have concluded that clause 1.2.1 of the BP terms is not in conflict with the Recap. Rather, it qualifies the Recap. The clause in the Recap entitled 'Determination of Quality and Quantity', had it stood alone, would have had the effect contended for by the Seller, that is, that in any claim for breach of contract the determination of the independent inspector would be binding as to quality. But it does not stand alone. It stands together with clause 1.2.1 of the BP terms. That clause can be read together with the Recap by regarding it as qualifying the otherwise general effect of the Recap by saying that the binding nature of the determination of the independent inspector is limited to questions of invoicing, without prejudice to any later claim for breach of contract. In that way both clauses can be read together and effect can be given to both of them. Thus clause 1.2.1 is not in conflict with the Recap. It qualifies or explains the Recap. To conclude that it was in conflict with the Recap would require the court to ignore the construction which fairly gives effect to both clauses. Such a construction, which gives effect to the BP terms, can hardly be inconsistent with commercial common sense. Of course the business purpose of an (unqualified) independent inspection clause is to avoid disputes about quality; see Toepfer v Continental Grain [1974] 1 Lloyd's Rep 11 at p.14 per Sir David Cairns. But the modification of such an unqualified clause brought about by the BP terms seeks to improve the position of the party wishing to challenge the independent inspector's determination by limiting the binding effect of the independent inspection to questions of invoicing and payment of the price. It cannot be suggested that such a modification was not consistent with commercial common sense. It is simply a variant of the determination of quality provision which limits the binding nature of the determination."
The parties' submissions
Discussion
"2.34 Inspection agencies Going beyond the prescribed quality itself, the central feature of the contractual scheme in the standard forms used for international sales is that matters of quality and chemical composition of the goods are to be decided in a way that binds both seller and buyer by a disinterested inspection agency which looks at samples drawn, usually on shipment. …
2.35 Merits of independent binding inspection The virtue of an inspection agreed by the parties to be binding carried out by an independent inspectorate is that it tends to minimize disagreement between the parties in respect of the quality and make-up of the goods supplied. Buyers receive an independent survey report and avoid costly disputes, getting the benefit of the same term in their sub-contracts; sellers avoid complaints that have to be resolved by evidence taken in a foreign country long after the goods have been delivered, and they have the chance to replace goods that do not pass muster with the surveyor at the port of shipment. …"
"In my judgment, the inspection provision in the telex is intended to be the only means of determining the quality and quantity of the cargo. The inspector is to be independent, albeit appointed by the seller and the costs are to be shared equally. Read alone, the clear effect is that the parties wish the quality and quantity to be conclusively determined by an independent inspector. They are content to share the cost because they jointly entrust to that inspector the determination of the quality and quantity actually shipped for the purpose of their contract.
By contrast, the inspection regime applicable at Yanbu under art 13.2 provides as follows: (i) The buyer can engage and pay an independent inspector to witness the measurement (presumably by others) of the vessel and its loading and to inspect the grade and quality of the product 'delivered'. (ii) The report of that inspector is not to be binding and is not to be used for invoice or bill of lading figures. (iii) The invoice and bill of lading figures will be determined by SAMAREC or its supplier and those figures will be based on shore samples and shore quantities. In this connection, I reject as contrary to the ordinary meaning and natural sense of the words the argument advanced by Mr Sussex [for the buyer] that 'determined for such purposes' includes binding the parties as well as providing invoice and bill of lading data.
That is a fundamentally different inspection regime from that of the telex inspection term. It involves no means of conclusive determination of either quality or quantity. …"
Disposal
Lord Justice Phillips:
Lord Justice Moylan: