BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[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 >> MUR Shipping BV v RTI Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 1406 (27 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1406.html Cite as: [2022] 2 CLC 754, [2023] 1 Lloyd's Rep 463, 205 Con LR 1, [2022] WLR(D) 427, [2023] Bus LR 355, [2022] EWCA Civ 1406, [2023] 1 All ER (Comm) 501 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2023] Bus LR 355] [View ICLR summary: [2022] WLR(D) 427] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Mr Justice Jacobs
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MALES
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
____________________
MUR SHIPPING BV |
Claimant/Respondent |
|
- and – |
||
RTI LTD |
Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
Nigel Eaton KC & Adam Woolnough (instructed by Rosling King LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 26 & 27 September 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males:
The contract of affreightment
"36.1. Subject to the terms of this Clause 36, neither Owners nor Charterers shall be liable to the other for loss, damage, delay or failure in performance caused by a Force Majeure Event as hereinafter defined. While such Force Majeure Event is in operation the obligation of each Party to perform this Charter Party (other than an accrued obligation to pay monies in respect of a previous voyage) shall be suspended.
36.2. Following the end of the Force Majeure Event, the Parties shall consult in good faith to make such adjustments as may be appropriate to the shipment schedule under this Charter Party.
36.3. A Force Majeure Event is an event or state of affairs which meets all of the following criteria:
a) It is outside the immediate control of the Party giving the Force Majeure Notice;
b) It prevents or delays the loading of the cargo at the loading port and/or the discharge of the cargo at the discharging port;
c) It is caused by one or more of acts of God, extreme weather conditions, war, lockout, strikes or other labour disturbances, explosions, fire, invasion, insurrection, blockade, embargo, riot, flood, earthquake, including all accidents to piers, shiploaders, and/or mills, factories, barges, or machinery, railway and canal stoppage by ice or frost, any rules or regulations of governments or any interference or acts or directions of governments, the restraint of princes, restrictions on monetary transfers and exchanges;
d) It cannot be overcome by reasonable endeavors from the Party affected.
36.4. A Party wishing to claim force majeure in respect of a Force Majeure Event must give the other Party a Force Majeure Notice within 48 hours (Saturdays, Sundays and holidays excepted) of becoming aware of the Force Majeure Event. Such Force Majeure Notice shall be a notice in writing which:
a) sets out or attaches details of the Force Majeure Event, and
b) states that the Party giving the Force Majeure Notice wishes to claim force majeure in respect of such Force Majeure Event.
c) give reasonable estimated duration of the Force Majeure Event to the extend [sic] it is reasonably possible to do so at the time of giving the Force Majeure Notice.
36.5. A Party which fails to give a Force Majeure Notice upon the occurrence of a Force Majeure Event in accordance with Clause 36.4 shall not be permitted to claim force majeure in respect of such Force Majeure Event.
36.6. Without prejudice to the generality of this Force Majeure Clause, time lost while waiting for berth at or off the loading port or discharge port and/or time lost while at berth at the loading port or discharge port by reason of a Force Majeure Event or one or more of the port authority imposing restrictions in relation to safe navigation in the port, the restraint of Princes, strikes, riots, lockouts of men, accidents, vessel being inoperative or rendered inoperative due to the terms and conditions of employments of the Officers and Crew, shall not count as laytime or time on demurrage."
The facts
"MUR were sorry to note that guarantors UC Rusal have been placed on the OFAC SDN list, and that as Charterers RTI are a subsidiary of UC Rusal, Charterers are similarly to be treated as if they are named on the list. …
Having reviewed the effect of these sanctions and General License 12 we note that, subject to the terms of that license, it would be a breach of sanctions for Owners to continue with the performance of the COA. For contracts entered into prior to 6 April 2018, General License No. 12 provides that performance until 5 June 2018 is permitted but only to the extent that it is 'ordinarily incident to and necessary to the maintenance or wind down of operations, contracts ...' etc, to do so. It is not 'necessary' for MUR to load any further cargoes under the COA and it would therefore be a breach of sanctions if MUR were to do so. MUR's present intention is to however continue with the transportation of Charterers' cargoes that have already been loaded as detailed above, provided that this can be done without breaching sanctions.
We further note that the sanctions will prevent dollar payments, which are required under the COA.
Therefore, as a result of the sanctions placed on Charterers and guarantors, we are left with no option but to claim force majeure in accordance with clause 36 of the charterparty and this notice will have to remain effective for as long as the sanctions remain in place, or unless it is possible to obtain relief from sanctions which we will investigate."
"... Freight is specified in US dollars in the recap, and 'restrictions on monetary transfers' is listed as a force majeure event which might prevent loading and discharging for the very good reason that if monetary transfers from Charterers to Owners are restricted Owners cannot be expected to load and discharge the cargo without receiving payment in accordance with the COA. For Charterers' guidance we can confirm that the notice was sent within the COA time limits, and Owners' notice remains in effect for the reasons set out above and in that notice."
The award
"43. … The effect of primary and even secondary sanctions is drastic. Normal commercial counterparties will be frightened of trading with the party that has been sanctioned, bank finance is likely to be frozen and underwriters will be reluctant to ensure normal trading activities. Consequently, MUR were prima facie perfectly entitled, subject to consideration of whether the force majeure event could be overcome by reasonable endeavours, to take time to review the position and opt for caution by only reinstating the COA once General License 14, which allow the activities to continue beyond the end of the COA period, had been issued."
"45. In any event, crucially the experts were agreed:
'In the event RTI was required, between April 6 and April 23, 2018, to make any U.S. Dollar payments to MUR that passed through an intermediary bank in the U.S. (which is highly likely), it is highly probable that the U.S. intermediary bank would have initially stopped the transfer on the basis of RTI's status as a blocked party until the bank could investigate whether the transaction complied with U.S. sanctions requirements'.
46. The evidence was that in practice virtually all US dollar transactions are routed through US banks and common sense indicates that any US bank would exercise extreme caution before making a payment that could conceivably fall foul of sanctions legislation."
"50. However, accepting payments in euros was a much more realistic possibility. It would have presented no disadvantages to MUR because their bank in the Netherlands could have credited them with US dollars as soon as the euros were received. RTI could of course not insist as of right on making payments in euros because their payment obligations in the COA were to pay US dollars. However, we are satisfied that it was a completely realistic alternative that MUR could have adopted with no detriment to them because (i) RTI made clear in correspondence that it would bear any additional costs or exchange rate losses in converting euros to US dollars and (ii) a number of payments were in fact made by RTI in euros and converted on receipt by MUR's bank; there is no evidence that MUR rejected those payments.
51. Consequently although MUR's case on force majeure succeeded in all other respects, it failed because it could have been 'overcome by reasonable endeavours from the Party affected'."
"52. Although the issue was academic, for the sake of completeness, we should comment that we considered that the force majeure notice given by MUR would have been effective. Clause 36 merely required the notice to set out details of the force majeure event. The details that mattered were the imposition of sanctions against Rusal. Contrary to the argument advanced on behalf of RTI, we did not consider that the force majeure notice was defective because it did not spell out in detail what specific parts of the COA operation could not be carried out because of sanctions."
The appeal to the Commercial Court
The scope of the appeal to this court
The submissions on appeal
The principal cases
"Even although it turns out that, when the vessel arrived at the port to which she was ordered, there was a strike of workmen there, the plaintiffs are not entitled to say to the defendant, because there was a strike there you ought not to have allowed the vessel to go there because it was not reasonable to do so. It is not a question between the plaintiffs and the defendants as to what is reasonable or unreasonable, it is a question of contract between the parties. … Therefore, the conclusion I come to in this case is, that the defendants were within their rights in sending the vessel to that port, and that, notwithstanding the finding of the jury on the question left to them, there ought to be judgment for the defendants."
"At the time when the charterers ordered the ship to the Regent's Canal there could be no objection to such an order, and there was nothing which happened afterwards to oblige the charterers to alter their order. It is true that when the vessel arrived at the Regent's Canal there was a difficulty in taking delivery because of a strike of workmen; but a strike would in itself not be sufficient to exonerate the charterers from doing the best they could to accept delivery, and would not entitle them to fold their arms and do nothing. If, notwithstanding the strike, they could by reasonable exertion have taken delivery of the cargo within the proper time, the strike would not have afforded them any defence. But the jury found that they could not, by any reasonable effort, have taken delivery. The delay, therefore, was caused entirely by the strike, and was within the exception in the charterparty. The judgment appealed against was right, and the appeal must be dismissed."
"The primary obligation is to provide a cargo of wheat only, the exceptions clause covers delay in the shipping of wheat, and there is no obligation on the charterers to lose that protection by exercising their option to provide another kind of cargo that is not affected by a cause of delay, even assuming such a cargo to be readily available. Really, that seems to me to contain the whole point of the dispute. There is in this case no duty on the charterers to 'switch' from wheat to barley or flour, because their choice of barley or flour is unfettered and is not at any time controlled in their hands by an overriding obligation to put on board by a fixed date a full cargo which must include those commodities, if it cannot consist of wheat alone."
Discussion
Disposal
Postscript
"I should also like to record that the questions in this case, one of fact, and four of the construction of the contract, have been resolved with the aid of only 55 authorities."
Lord Justice Arnold:
Lord Justice Newey: