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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Owneast Shipping Ltd v Qatar Navigation QSC [2010] EWHC 1663 (Comm) (07 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/1663.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1663 (Comm), [2011] 1 Lloyd's Rep 350, [2010] 2 CLC 42 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Owneast Shipping Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Qatar Navigation QSC |
Defendant |
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Chirag Karia (instructed by Davies Johnson & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 21st June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Christopher Clarke :
The facts as found by the tribunal
"5. Payment of said hire to be made to Owners designated bank account in cash in United States Currency, 15 days in advance . . . otherwise failing the punctual and regular payment of the hire, or bank guarantee or deposit, or on any fundamental breach of this Charter Party, the Owners shall be at liberty to withdraw the vessel from the service of the Charterers, without prejudice to any claim they may have against the Charterers. . . ."
15. That in the event of the loss of time from deficiency and/or default and/or strike of men or deficiency of stores, fire, breakdown or damages to hull, machinery or equipment, grounding, detention by average accidents to ship or cargo, drydocking for the purposes of examination or painting bottom, or by any other cause preventing the full working of the vessel, the payment of hire shall cease for the time thereby lost and all extra directly related expenses may be deducted from hire;…
62. Punctual Payment
Referring to lines 60 and 61, where there is any failure to make "punctual and regular payment" due to errors or omission of Charterers' employees, bankers or Agents or otherwise for any reason where there is absence of intention to fail to make payment as set out, Charterers shall be given by owners 3 banking days notice to rectify the failure and where so rectified the payment shall stand as punctual and regular payment."
"7. On 6th August 2006 the Charterers' Operations Department in Dubai requested the local agents in India to send a statement of facts for the vessel's discharge at Kandla. On the following day the agents emailed a statement of facts, copied to Capt. Hatch, and the master of the vessel emailed (copied to Capt. Hatch) a summary of the periods of time during 28th July to 3rd August when there were crane breakdowns.
8. On 8th August 2006 the Charterers' Dubai Office sent to the Doha Office a hire payment request in respect of the 33rd period, which started on 9th August. Amongst the amounts deducted from the gross hire due was US $5371.57 in respect of off-hire at Kandla. This request for payment of hire was issued in accordance with the usual practice in the Charterers' organisation which was as follows. The request for payment would be prepared in the Dubai office by Mrs Louly Raju, who was known as "Miss Lovely", and signed by Hamad Al Hitmi. It would the be sent to the Doha Office, where the payment would have to be authorised by two higher management officers out of the Vice Chairman and Chief Executive, another member of the Board of Directors and the Deputy Chief Executive Operations and the Deputy Chief Executive Finance & Administration Affairs. A transfer instruction would then be prepared, on the bank's prescribed form, and, taken to the Charterers' bank in Doha, Standard Chartered Bank, and the bank would then effect inter-bank transfer to the Owners' bank in Copenhagen.
9. The Charterers' Doha Office had not sent a transfer instruction to their bank by 14th August 2006. On that day the Owners served an anti-technicality clause notice under clause 62. Immediately on the same day the Charterers sent the transfer instruction to their bank. Owners' bank confirmed receipt of payment on 15 August.
10. On 16th August 2006, the Charterers having provided Owners with a breakdown of their off-hire deductions from the 33rd period statement, the Owners challenged the justification for that and requested the statement of facts.
11. On 20th August Ms Lovely drew up a draft transfer request in respect of the 34th period hire payment. It showed deductions only for address commission and standard expenses. She marked the copy "Due date in owners bank: 24th August 06". That left 4 days for Hamad Al Hitmi to sign it, for it to be sent to the Doha Office, for it to be signed by three management officers and for a payment instruction to be prepared and to be couriered to Standard Chartered, and then for the inter-bank transfer to be operated. The minimum period of time which it had previously taken for the inter-bank transfer had been 2 days. Accordingly, if payment was to reach the owners by 24th, the last day on which a payment instruction could be provided to the bank was 22nd August.
12. On 21st August 2006 the Owners repeated their request for a statement of facts in support of the deduction from the 33rd hire period payment, but Capt Hatch replied to the Charterers' agents that Charterers were "having a meeting" about the vessel at that time and he would get back to them later that day. He did not do so. In the meantime nothing was done about forwarding the request for payment of hire to the Doha office. According to the evidence of Ms. Lovely, she was informed by the Chartering Department that further deductions would be necessary for off-hire, crane breakdown and additional expenses incurred as a result of the vessel having to leave the berth at Kandla and shift to the anchorage to complete discharge, and that the calculation of these further deductions, which would initially be made by Capt. Hatch and the Chartering Department, would be delayed until further information had been obtained from the vessel and/or Kandla.
13. It was, however, only on 22nd August 2006 that Capt. Hatch requested the agents at Kandla to provide a discharge statement of facts, showing the date and time each hold completed discharge. Although Capt. Hatch had received a discharge statement of facts on 7th August, that did not provide the time at which each hold had been completed.
14. The agents duly provided the requested statement of facts on 22nd August, but it arrived after the Dubai office had closed. Nobody was left on duty in the Dubai office to receive that information after hours in spite of the need to effect payment in Denmark on 24th August. When the Dubai office re-opened on 23rd August the Operations Section then made calculations of the required deductions from hire and passed them to Ms Lovely to draft a transfer request for Hamad al Hitmi to sign. The deduction for off-hire and bunkers was shown at US $34,643.44. Remarkably, although the office opened at 7.00, this exercise was not completed until the afternoon and it was only at 14.48 that the re-drafted and signed transfer request was faxed to the Doha office. In the meantime, on the morning of 23rd August Mr. Hamad Al Hitmi telephoned Mr. Khalifa Ali Al Hitmi in the Doha office "to remind him" that the 34th period hire payment was due on 24th and to inform him that the transfer request would be faxed to Doha that afternoon. In his witness statement Hamad al Hitmi made the following remarkable comment:
"When the payment request was sent by fax to Doha on 23 August I believed that it would be actioned on that day or at latest on 24 August and that the necessary signatures would be obtained and that payment would be made to Owners bank on time."
15. In view of the fact that the Doha office closed at 15.00 it is hard to see how Mr. Hitmi could possibly have believed at 14.48 on 23rd August that payment would be effected by the close of 24th August, unless his belief was that payment to the Owners could be effected on the same day as the transfer instruction was given to the Standard Chartered Bank. That this was his belief is most improbable in view of his statement that, if the vessel had not been withdrawn, a transfer instruction given on 27th August would have covered payment to the Owners' bank on 28th or 29th August.
16. According to the evidence of Ms Lovely, as soon as she had faxed through to the Doha office the final form of the transfer request, she spoke by telephone to Mr. Joseph, the Head Cashier in the office in Doha, to confirm that the fax had been received "and asked him to hurry up the payment process without delay". Mr. Joseph told her that it was too late to process the payment that afternoon but that they would be working on it the following morning. Ms Lovely appears to have been aware of the considerable urgency of payment because, according to her evidence, she telephoned the Doha office on the following morning to check that they were circulating the transfer instruction to the necessary signatories. She also states that she asked Hamad al Hitmi to speak to Khalifa Ali Al Hitmi at Doha "and ask him to do the needful to speed up the payment".
17. In the event it took the Doha office practically the entire morning of 24th August to obtain the "management approvals" for payment and to obtain all three signatures on the completed transfer instruction to the bank. Eventually that document was carried by car to the bank, leaving at 12.45. However, the bank closed at 13.00 and, the traffic being heavy because it was a Thursday midday, by the time the Charterers' Head Cashier arrived, the bank had closed for the weekend.
18. The Charterers' bank in Doha was closed on Friday 25th August.
19. The Owners withdrew the vessel from the charter at 10.11 on 25th August 2006. This notice of withdrawal relied on Charterers' many previous delays in payment and the fact that on each previous occasion Owners had been obliged to protest their conduct. The notice stated:
"It is clear to us that your persistent failure to pay hire timeously as required by the Charterparty is deliberate and/or that you no longer intend to be bound by the terms of the Charterparty. We therefore hereby give you notice that we are exercising our right under clause 5 of the Charterparty and withdrawing "QATAR STAR" from your service with immediate effect, alternatively we hereby accept your conduct as amounting a to a repudiatory breach of the Charterparty and are terminating the Charterparty with immediate effect.
In the event, the Charterers stopped payment of hire on receiving this notice."
"27. The effect of these authorities, to the extent material to the facts of the facts of the present case, is as follows.
(i) In order to make good an entitlement to withdraw the vessel under clause 5 for failure to make punctual and regular payment of charter hire, the Owners must prove either (a) that the Charterers' failure to pay had already occurred and was not caused by any one or more of the eventualities listed in clause 62 or (b) if such failure had been caused by one or more of those eventualities, that the Owners had given an unambiguous anti-technicality notice and three banking days had expired without payment being made by the Charterers.
(ii) A clause 62 notice can only be effectively given after there has been a default in punctual and regular payment. In a case where Charterers had failed to make any payment whatever, Charterers' unexpressed intention to make in future an unjustifiable deduction from hire would not make it unnecessary for Owners to give a clause 62 notice.
(iii) If payment of hire was made less an objectively unjustifiable deduction, an intention to pay less than the total amount due would not be established for the purposes of clause 62 unless it were established that the Owners had made the deduction in bad faith, that is to say without a belief that such deduction was justifiable on the facts. "
The first question: will recklessness suffice to exclude clause 62?
"…instructions to pay hire (on time) must be given to the Charterers' bank by noon. If they are given at 1145 payment will be on time, if given at 1215 payment will almost certainly be late. So there comes a "crunch time" when a decision has to be made. Charterers are awaiting a vital piece of information which will enable them to make a substantial deduction from the instalment due by reason of an off-hire event. They do not want to leave the matter over for the next instalment due in 15 days time for cash flow reasons. They decide to wait. Noon passes. They then receive the information, calculate the hire and give instructions to the bank at 1215. Inevitably the hire is received late. Can it be said that they did not "intend" to pay late? In my view the answer is a categorical no."
Owners' submissions
"A. Intention
Some torts require intention on the part of the wrongdoer…
…we are still left with the problem of defining intention. Everyone agrees that a person intends a consequence if it is his desire or motive to bring it about, but beyond that it is probably not possible to lay down any universal definition for the purposes of tort…
In the context of trespass to land it has been said that indifference to a risk that trespass will occur by animals in the defendant's charge amounts to intention, and that it is thought that the same approach should be taken in all trespass torts…This is the state of mind referred to in criminal law as "subjective recklessness", that is to say the wrongdoer is conscious of the risk he is taking. Where recklessness as to consequences will do in a tort, so will recklessness as to circumstances."
"1-55: Objective Intention and Recklessness. In the context of torts requiring intentional conduct as opposed to intentional harm, there is less objection to implying a concept of imputed intention. Recklessness will generally be sufficient to establish liability…"
"25-20 Recklessness. Similarly, recklessness may import intention under the modern authorities…"
Conclusion on first question
"Unlike most English words reckless has been in the English language as a word in general use at least since the 8th century A.D. almost always with the same meaning applied to a person or conduct evincing a state of mind stopping short of deliberate intention, and going beyond mere inadvertence, . . . The Oxford English Dictionary quotes several examples from Old English, many from the Middle English period, and many more from modern English. The word was familiar to the Venerable Bede, to Langland, to Chaucer, to Sir Thomas More and to Shakespeare. . . . Though its pronunciation has varied, so far as I know its meaning has not. There is no separate legal meaning to the word. This retains its dictionary sense . . ." (Emphasis added.).
"Plainly the second concept is different from the first, otherwise its presence would add nothing to the content of the article."
(Per Auld L.J. at p. 226, col. 1, quoting with approval from the judgment of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in SS Pharmaceutical v. Qantas Airways [1991] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 288, 291, col. 1.)
"As was said in S.S. Pharmaceutical, the concept of recklessness with knowledge that damage would probably result is different from the concept of intent to cause damage"
(Per Dyson, J at p. 232, col. 2.)
a) The International Convention on the Carriage of Hazardous and Noxious Substances by Sea (Schedule 5A to the Merchant Shipping Act 1995), Articles 7(5) & 9(2);
b) The Convention on the Carriage of Passengers and Luggage by Sea (Schedule 6 to the Merchant Shipping Act 1995), Article 13.
c) The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Carriage of Goods Wholly or Partly by Sea ("The Rotterdam Rules"), article 62.
"(a) intending or knowing that a relevant fact shall or will exist, and (b) lesser states of mind, such as recklessness or suspicion, regarding the existence of a relevant fact. Parliament intended that in conspiracy cases proof of recklessness or suspicion would not suffice. In conspiracy cases the prosecution must go further."
The second question
Discussion
"This defence by its nature is such that it must be open to the charterer to set it up before ascertainment, not merely as a means of preventing the owner obtaining judgment or, at any rate, execution but also as an immediate answer as to his liability to pay hire otherwise due. [-- He then said, differing from Lord Denning:--] Of course he acts at his peril and, if he is wrong, he will enable the owner to determine the charterparty if he is willing for his part to act at his peril the other way."
"37. The submission on behalf of the Owners that an intention not to make punctual and regular payment is established by reason of the preparation of a request for payment which included a substantial deduction from hire for crane breakdown and disbursement which could not be justified is in our view untenable. The claim against Owners is that they withdrew the vessel without giving the clause 62 notice which they ought to have done following the Charterers' omission to pay any hire by 24th August.
38. Owners challenge that on the grounds that no such notice was required because the cause of that total failure to pay was the Charterer's intention totally to fail to pay. "
[Emphasis by the Tribunal]
Intention as to what?
"31 ….However, in the present case, we have little hesitation in concluding that it (i.e. the clause) does not apply. This is largely because the clause provides that there must be an absence of intention to fail to make payment "as set out" i.e. punctual and regular. It seems clear on the evidence in this case that the Charterers had every intention of making the payment they actually made. They told the Owners what they intended to do, they did it, and they have maintained that it was in compliance with their obligations under clause 5 to this day"
Discussion