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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 >> King Crude Carriers SA & Ors v Ridgebury November LLC & Ors [2024] EWCA Civ 719 (27 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/719.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 719, [2024] WLR(D) 298 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (KBD)
MRS JUSTICE DIAS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
and
LADY JUSTICE FALK
____________________
(1) KING CRUDE CARRIERS SA (2) PRINCE CRUDE CARRIERS SA (3) ZENON CRUDE CARRIERS SA |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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(1) RIDGEBURY NOVEMBER LLC (2) RIDGEBURY SIERRA LLC (3) MAKRONISSOS SPECIAL MARITIME ENTERPRISE |
Defendants/ Appellants |
____________________
Nigel Eaton KC and David Barnard (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 1 and 2 May 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL :
Introduction
How the issue arises
"As security for the correct fulfilment of this Agreement, the Buyers shall lodge a deposit of 10% (ten per cent) of the Purchase Price (the "Deposit") in an account for the Parties with [HFW] who shall hold the Deposit in escrow for the Parties, and who shall only release same in accordance with and pursuant to the terms of an escrow agreement to be entered into between themselves (acting as escrow agent), the Sellers and the Buyers (the "Escrow Agreement") within 3 Banking Days after the date that:
(i) this Agreement has been signed by the Parties and exchanged in original or by e-mail or telefax; and
(ii) the Deposit Holder has confirmed in writing to the Parties that the account has been fully opened and ready [sic] to receive funds.
... The Parties shall provide to [HFW] all necessary documentation to open and maintain the account without delay."
(1) the deposit was not lodged in accordance with clause 2, in which case the Sellers were also entitled "to claim compensation for their losses and for all expenses"; or
(2) the 90% balance of the purchase price was not paid in accordance with clause 3, in which case the deposit "shall be released to the Sellers".
(1) they would constitute debts owed by Buyers to Sellers notwithstanding that they were to be paid to a third party stakeholder; and
(2) they would remain due and payable after termination pursuant to clause 13 because (a) at common law, lawful termination does not affect rights which have accrued prior to termination; (b) clause 13 does not circumscribe or remove such common law rights but provides for additional rights to 'compensation for [Sellers'] losses'; and in any event (c) the additional right to compensation conferred by clause 13 includes a right to compensation for non-payment of the deposits, which would include the amount of the deposits.
Issue 2: …..are the Buyers liable because they cannot rely on their own breach of contract preventing the fulfilment of a condition precedent to payment?
Issue 3: If so, are the Sellers entitled to a final partial award for the amount of the deposit?
The Judgment
"vi) Where an obligation is expressed to be contingent on some other event, then it will not become effective unless and until that event occurs. An obvious example is the negotiation of an agreement "subject to contract". In this situation, signature of the contract is a condition precedent to the existence of a binding agreement and if it is never signed, the agreement never becomes effective. Conversely, an agreement may be subject to a condition subsequent or defeasant whereby it determines on the occurrence of the stipulated event: Chitty (op.cit.) §4-196."
vii) If a claimant's ability to earn the debt is contingent on the defendant's performance and the defendant does not perform, the claimant cannot claim the debt but is restricted to a claim in damages: Chitty (op. cit.) §§30-006 to 30-009; Goode & McKendrick on Commercial Law (6th ed.) §3.116. Thus, absent agreement to the contrary, voyage charter freight is earned only upon arrival of the goods at the port of destination in merchantable condition ready to be delivered: Scrutton on Charterparties (24th ed.) §16-001. If the goods are lost during the voyage or are not delivered for some other reason, the freight is not earned and never becomes due. Likewise, the general rule in sale of goods cases is the seller cannot claim the price unless and until property in the goods has passed to the buyer, even if it is the wrongful act of the buyer which prevents property passing: Benjamin on Sale of Goods (11th ed.) §§16-001, 16-021, 16-023, 16-062. The seller's remedy in this situation is a claim for damages for non-acceptance."
The rival arguments in outline
Analysis
Claims in debt and damages: some basic principles
The authorities
"The Respondents were only entitled to receive payment of the price of the machine on the condition that it should be tried at a proper working face provided by the Appellant, and that on trial it should excavate a certain amount of clay or other soft substance within a given time. They have been thwarted in the attempt to fulfil that condition by the neglect or refusal of the Appellant to furnish the means of applying the stipulated test; and their failure being due to his fault, I am of opinion that, as in a question with him, they must be taken to have fulfilled the condition. The passage cited by Lord Shand from Bell's Principles (§ 50) to the effect that, "If the debtor bound under a certain condition have impeded or prevented the event, it is held as accomplished. If the creditor had done all that he can to fulfil a condition which is incumbent on himself, it is held sufficient implement," expresses a doctrine, borrowed from the civil law, which has long been recognised in the law of Scotland, and I think it ought to be applied to the present case."
"If a man make a feoffment in fee, upon condition that the feoffee shall re-infeoff him before such a day, and before the day the feoffor disseise the feoffee, and hold him out by force until the day be past, the state of the feoffee is absolute; for the feoffor is the cause wherefore the condition cannot be performed, and therefore shall never take advantage for non-performance thereof. And so it is if A. be bound to B. that I.S. shall marry Jane G. before such a day, and before the day B. marry with Jane, he shall never take advantage of the bond, for that he himself is the mean that the condition could not be performed. And this is regularly true in all cases.'
"It is unnecessary to say whether the clause relative to the certificate be a condition precedent or not; for granting it to be a condition precedent, yet the plaintiffs having taken all proper steps to obtain the certificate, and it being rendered impossible to be performed by the neglect and default of the company's agents, which the jury have found to be the case, it is equal to performance. If it were necessary to cite any case for this, which is evident from common sense, it was so held in Roll.'s Abridgment, 445, and many other books."
"If so, there was a right of action once fairly vested in the plaintiffs, from the defendants not having fully-laden the ship before she left India, which they were by their covenant bound to do. For all that is necessary prima facie to found an action of covenant upon is, that the covenant should be broken. And this right of action, once vested, was only capable of being devested by a subsequent non-feazance, namely, by not taking the proper steps to procure a survey after the arrival of the ship in the river Thames. This therefore being a circumstance, the omission of which was to defeat the plaintiff's right of action, once vested, whether called by the name of a proviso by way of defeazance, or a condition subsequent, it must in its nature be a matter of defence, and ought to be shewn by the defendants; and as they have not insisted on it, though they have insisted on the want of a certificate, we must, after verdict, take it that the fact did not exist; and it will follow as a consequence that there is no ground for arresting the judgment, and that the rule must be discharged."
"…for it is a principle very well established at common law, that no person can take advantage of the non-fulfilment of a condition the performance of which has been hindered by himself; see Com. Dig. Condition (L);…"
"So the performance of a condition shall be excused by the obstruction of the obligee; as if a condition be to build a house; and he, or another by his order, hinders the coming upon the land. Or says that it shall not be built. So if a condition be that the lessee shall leave a house in good plight; and fire out of the chimney of the lessor next to it consumes it."
"Thus in Mackay v. Dick, the maker of an excavating machine was required by the contract to send the machine for the purpose of being tested to the railway cutting which the buyer was engaged in constructing, and the buyer was only to be liable to pay for it if it there in working satisfied the test. This House held that the buyers had prevented fulfilment of the condition because they held that, it being the buyer's duty under the contract to provide the necessary facilities, he had failed to do so. Hence his default prevented the seller from satisfying the condition. The seller could therefore say that he had done all that lay on him to fulfil the condition and was to be taken to have implemented it. The test was only not satisfied because of the buyer's default."
"Payment shall be effected as required by the repairers on the basis of cash against expenditure during the progress of the work and the ascertained balance on the completion of the repairs and every such payment shall be effected promptly by the owners after the issue of a certificate by the owners' surveyor that the work has been satisfactorily carried out and on receipt of a certificate of the amount due issued by the Costs Investigation Branch of the Ministry of War Transport and certifying that same has been checked and found correct."
"The view of the function of the appellants' surveyor under cl. 7 of the contract which I have already expressed, makes it clear beyond dispute that the respondents have done everything which was necessary for them to do in order to require Dr Telfer to proceed to consider the granting of a certificate under cl. 7, but that Dr Telfer declined to proceed with the matter unless he was provided with the information to which on his erroneous view of the contract, he held himself entitled; in this view the appellants concurred, and this position was maintained up to and after the issue of the writ. This means that an illegitimate condition precedent to any consideration of the granting of a certificate was insisted on by Dr Telfer and by the appellants. It is almost unnecessary to cite authority to establish that such conduct on the appellants' part absolved the respondents from the necessity of obtaining such a certificate, and that the respondents are entitled to recover the amount claimed in the action."
"If the appellants had taken the contrary view of their surveyor's function under cl. 7, it would have been their duty to appoint another surveyor to discharge that function, and if they had refused to appoint another surveyor, the respondents would clearly have been absolved from the necessity of obtaining the surveyor's certificate; the respondents are equally so absolved when the appellants' wrongful view of their surveyor's function under cl. 7 prevents the appellants from obtaining the certificate. I agree with the view expressed on this point by Goddard L.J."
"It is and must be conceded that if a party desires to rely on the non-performance of a condition precedent, he must do nothing to prevent the condition from being performed, and if there is anything that must be done by him to render possible the performance of the condition, a failure by him to do what is required disentitles him from insisting on performance of the condition."
"The second proposition, based on the opinion of Lord Watson, advances a stage further and gives the plaintiff in appropriate cases an additional form of relief. If the breach of the implied term prevents the plaintiff from performing a condition binding upon him, he is to be taken as having fulfilled that condition: and if the condition is one on which his right to payment depends, he may therefore sue for payment instead of damages. That these propositions are distinct is shown by the fact that Lord Blackburn's reasoning does not involve the second at all. His construction of the contract does not require it. He says at p. 264 "…". On this view, there was no question of the defender preventing the pursuers from claiming payment; he prevented himself from escaping from the liability to pay. ….. Lord Watson, in Mackay v. Dick, sup.at p. 270, proceeded on a different construction of the contract and so invoked the principle I have stated. He rested it upon well-established doctrine (see also the authorities cited by McCardie, J., in Colley v. Overseas Exporters, sup., at p. 308) and not upon any implication in the contract."
"They did none of these things, and their failure to do these things which by necessary implication under the contract they were required to do was the reason why the sellers were prevented from tendering the goods. Accordingly, in my judgment, for the reasons which I have given and on the principle of Mackay v. Dick and Another, sup., the defendants cannot rely upon the defence that the goods were not actually delivered in London.
That leads me then to the matters which are raised in the amended defence, and I am not at all sure that it is a good defence in law. As Mr. Whitworth put the matter in his closing speech for the plaintiffs, his case is this: he is suing for payment. Payment under the contract which I have found was made was due 30 days after invoice. The delivery of the invoice is not disputed, and 30 days have elapsed. Therefore, prima facie, his case for payment can proceed. If the only answer that can be made to that is for the defendants to set up some condition precedent to payment which the plaintiffs have failed to fulfil, the only condition precedent which they can set up is that the goods had not been delivered. Whether that is a condition precedent or not, I need not determine, but assuming that it is, for the reasons I have already given it is not open to them now to set up that condition, the non-fulfilment of that condition. Therefore this point fails. In short, by waiving delivery, because that is what it amounts to, they waived their right to inspect and reject the goods."
"The only defence to this claim, apart from a challenge to its amount, is that the Engineer never certified it before 1st April 1986. This, as is now admitted, was an omission for which the G.L.C. was vicariously responsible. That being so, the L.R.B. is unable to rely upon this as a defence. It goes not only to the issue of whether the payment was due, but also to the issue of when it became payable. But for the failure of the Engineer to certify, it would have been both due and payable before 1st April 1986. If the L.R.B. as the G.L.C.'s successor in respect of pre-April 1986 liabilities is, in effect, estopped from relying upon the absence of the certificate, it is as if no certificate had ever been required with the result that the payment was due and payable at a time for which the L.R.B. is responsible. The authority for this quasi-estoppel is to be found in a long line of cases of which the best known is perhaps McKay v. Dick [1881] A.C. 251."
"Here the L.R.B., as "executors" of the G.L.C., seek to take advantage of the G.L.C.'s failure to issue an Engineer's certificate by contending both that in the circumstances no payment was due before 1st April 1986 and that, even if any such payment was due before then, it was not payable before that date – debitum in praesenti, solvendum in futuro. If we were to accede to either proposition, we should be allowing the G.L.C. and the L.R.B. standing in its shoes to take advantage of its own wrong."
"the doctrine of deemed performance endorsed by the House of Lords in Mackay v Dick (1881) 6 App Cas 251, according to which a party who is prevented by the non-cooperation of the counterparty from satisfying a condition precedent to his right to receive remuneration may be deemed to have earned it notwithstanding the condition".
"The reason, as I understand it, why the plaintiff in Mackay v. Dick recovered the price and not damages was that the machine had been delivered and the property had passed, subject only to the defendant's right to reject if the machine on a special test failed to come up to a particular standard of performance. The defendant, having prevented the holding of that test, was held to be in the same position as if the condition had been fulfilled. In other words, the price became payable not because the property was deemed to have passed but because the condition was deemed to have been fulfilled. If in such a case as this the ship had arrived, but it was provided that lay days were not to begin until something had been done which depended on the charterers' co-operation, then if the charterers refused or neglected to co-operate, that something might well be deemed to have been done. But here, if I am right, the primary obligation to arrive geographically was never fulfilled; and, that being so, I think the charterers' breach is a matter for counterclaim."
"The principle expressed by Lord Watson in Mackay v. Dick, 6 App Cas 251, 270, is not, in my view, a principle of English law. The fictional fulfilment of conditions precedent and the fictional non-fulfilment of conditions subsequent may be principles of the civil law, but they are not principles of English law. In this area of the law of contract English law proceeds, in my view, by means of implied terms. If a term can be implied that a party will not do an act that, if done, would prevent the fulfilment of a condition precedent, then the doing of that act will be a breach of contract; if a term can be implied that a party will not do an act that, if done, would cause a condition subsequent to be fulfilled, then the doing of that act will be a breach of contract. But if a suitable term cannot be implied into the contract then in my judgment, the contract will take effect according to its tenor. The condition precedent will fail and the condition subsequent will be fulfilled."
"General principles
1. The doctrine of fictional fulfilment of a condition precedent which is found in the civil law forms no part of English law. The only questions which fall to be answered in English law are whether on the true construction of Clause 26(1) of the Lease and in the events which have happened (i) the condition precedent in paragraph (c) has been satisfied and (ii) if not whether in the circumstances it needed to be satisfied.
2. The process of construction includes, where applicable, the necessary implication of unexpressed terms and the doctrine that a man may not take advantage of his own wrong.
3. The latter doctrine is confined to the case where a party seeks to take advantage of his own breach of a legal obligation owed by him to the party opposite. Where, in breach of a contractual obligation, express or implied, a party has prevented the fulfilment of a condition precedent, he may not only be liable in damages for the breach but may also be precluded from claiming that the condition has not been fulfilled. But nothing less than breach of a legal obligation will do: see Cheall v. Association of Professional Executive Clerical and Computer Staff.
…"
Principle
"In argument counsel for the appellant cited cases such as Mackay v Dick (1881) 6 App Cas 251 in support of the submission that where one party makes it impossible for a condition of the contract to be fulfilled, the condition is to be taken as satisfied. That is true in some cases, but not in all; whether performance of a condition precedent is excused where a party has prevented its performance must depend upon the nature of the condition and circumstances of the case. In some cases the nature and purposes of the condition will themselves be sufficient to indicate that the parties must have intended that the obligations which are expressed to be dependent on the fulfilment of the condition will come into existence only if the condition is fulfilled, and that it will not be enough that performance of the condition has been prevented by the wrongful act of one of the parties."
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE :
LADY JUSTICE FALK :