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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Petroleo Brasileiro S.A. v Kriti Akti Shipping Co. S.A. [2003] EWHC 1634 (Comm) (09 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2003/1634.html Cite as: [2003] 2 Lloyd's Rep 584, [2003] EWHC 1634 (Comm), [2003] 2 All ER (Comm) 654, [2003] 2 LLR 584 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PETROLEO BRASILEIRO S.A. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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KRITI AKTI SHIPPING CO. S.A. |
Defendant |
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Mr. Steven Berry Q.C. (instructed by Holman Fenwick & Willan) for Kriti Akti Shipping Co. S.A.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Moore-Bick:
"3. Owners agree to let and Charterers agree to hire the vessel for a period of 11 (eleven) months, 15 days more or less in Charterers' option . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18 . . . . . . . . Notwithstanding the provisions of clause 3 hereof, should the vessel be upon a voyage at the expiry of the period of this charter, charterers shall have the use of the vessel at the same rate and conditions for such extended time as may be necessary for the completion of the round voyage on which she is engaged and her return to a port of redelivery as provided by this charter. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
CLS 50 EXTENTION
Any loss of time during which the vessel is off hire shall count as part of the charter period and may be used by charterers at their option as an extention of the aforesaid charter period."
"(i) whether the "period of this charter" in clause 18 includes or excludes any additional period for which Charterers may elect to keep the vessel on charter in exercise of their option under clause 50, and
(ii) if it includes clause 50 periods, whether the charter as so extended by clause 50 includes the tolerance of 15 days in clause 3."
The effect of clause 50
The construction of clause 18
"In view of those three propositions, when I speak of the "charter period", I mean the stated period plus or minus any permitted margin or allowance, express or implied. There follow these two propositions:
(d) If the charterer sends the vessel on a legitimate last voyage - that is, a voyage which it is reasonably expected will be completed by the end of the charter period, the shipowner must obey the directions" (emphasis added).
"about minimum 10 months maximum 12 months time charter, exact duration in charterers' option."
The charter also gave the charterers an option to complete a last voyage. The vessel was delivered on 11th June 1987 so the basic period expired on 11th June 1988. On 6th May 1988 the charterers sub-chartered her for a voyage from the River Plate to the Far East which, if it had been performed, would have resulted in her not being redelivered before 19th July 1988. The owners considered that even making full allowance for the use of the expression "about" the vessel ought to be redelivered by 25th June 1988 at the latest, but the charterers refused to give alternative orders that would enable that to occur. They also refused the owners' demand to pay hire at the market rate after that date. The owners therefore withdrew the vessel from the charterers' service.
"The cases and books draw a distinction between two cases which have become known as "the illegitimate last voyage" and "the legitimate last voyage". In the former case the charterer gives orders for the employment of the vessel which cannot reasonably be expected to be performed by the final terminal date. He is therefore seeking to avail himself of the services of the vessel at a time when the owner had never agreed to render such services. It is accordingly an order which the charterer is not entitled to give (just as an order to visit a prohibited port would be) and in giving it the charterer commits a breach of contract (perhaps a repudiatory breach but that we need not decide). The owner need not comply with such an order, because he has never agreed to do so. Alternatively, he may comply with the order although not bound to do so: if he does comply, he is entitled to payment of hire at the charter-party rate until redelivery of the vessel and (provided he does not waive the charterer's breach) to damages (being the difference between the charter rate and the market rate if the market rate is higher than the charter rate) for the period between the final terminal date and redelivery. . . . . . . . . . . In the contrasting case of the legitimate last voyage the charterer gives orders for the employment of the vessel which can reasonably be expected to be performed by the final terminal date. These are orders which the charterer is entitled to give, and so legitimate."
"the charterers shall have the option of continuing this charter for a further period of six months, 30 days more or less at charterers' option, declarable at the end of the fourth month."
"The point depends on the effect of the words which stated the original period to be "6 months 30 days more or less". Mr. Pickering says that that gave the charterers a time charter for any period from five to seven months at charterers' option. I cannot agree. I think it only gives the charterers six months with a margin of tolerance of 30 days either way. If the "30 days more or less" were not mentioned, the law would imply a reasonable margin of tolerance before or after the six months. The reason being because the time charterer of a ship cannot be sure exactly at what date he can get the ship redelivered. He must have some tolerance before the end of the six months or a few days afterwards. But the parties can expressly stipulate what the margin of tolerance is. That is made clear in the recent case of The Dione [1975] 1 Lloyd's Rep. at 115. They can and do expressly stipulate what that margin is to be. In that case the words were "six months time charter 20 days more or less". It was held that the 20 days was an express agreement as to the exact extent of the tolerance. So here the 30 days is not an extension of the charter. It is simply an express agreement as to the tolerance permitted. If that is the right interpretation of the original period, then, when one comes to the option clause, when it speaks of "a further period of a further 6 months", it means a further period following on the first six months - not following on five months or seven months. So at the end of the first six months there is to be a further period of a further six months "30 days more or less". So it means that the time charter lasts for six months plus six months - that is, 12 months in all-30 days more or less. It means that it goes for the full period of 12 months "30 days more or less". In my opinion, therefore, the owners were right in saying that after the 12 months expired there were only 30 days left. These expired by July 28, 1974. The vessel ought to have been redelivered then. She was not redelivered then, and they were entitled to withdraw the vessel, as they did, on Aug. 6, 1974. The Judge so decided and I agree with him. Any other view would mean that the charterers could have redelivered the vessel at any time between 10 months and 14 months. That would not make business sense, at any rate, to my mind.
There is another point I would mention. It seems to me that the phrase "30 days more or less at charterers' option" was not a true option. It did not have to be exercised by express notice or declaration such as Lord Devlin said would be necessary for a true option: see the Reardon Smith case, [1963] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 12; [1963] A.C. 691. The charterer could properly redeliver the vessel within the 30 days more or less so long as he gave the proper notice of redelivery, which would be 30 days in this case. It would not be necessary for him to do anything more by way of exercising an option."
"it can hardly have been the intention of the parties that the charterers in the circumstances of this case should have the benefit of two tolerance periods in respect of only one delivery."
However, it was nonetheless necessary to identify the initial period to which the extension was to be added.