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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 >> Bunge SA v Kyla Shipping Company Ltd [2012] EWHC 3522 (Comm) (10 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/3522.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3522 (Comm) |
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QUEEN S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
IN AN ARBITRATION CLAIM AND IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BUNGE S.A. |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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KYLA SHIPPING COMPANY LIMITED |
Respondents |
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Steven Berry QC and James Turner (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 19th and 20th November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Flaux:
Introduction and background
Clause 1 That the Owners shall provide and pay for all provisions, wages and consular shipping and discharging fees of the Crew; see also Rider Clauses shall pay for the insurance of the vessel.. . and maintain her class and keep the vessel in a thoroughly efficient state in hull, and holds, machinery and equipment.
Clause 15 That in the event of the loss of time from... damages to hull, machinery or equipment... the payment of hire shall cease for the time thereby lost...
Clause 16 ...The Act of God, enemies, fire, restraint of Princes, Rulers and People, and all dangers and accidents of the Seas, Rivers, Machinery, Boilers and Steam Navigation, and errors of Navigation throughout this charterparty, always mutually excepted.
Line 138 (below clause 21 which was deleted) In case of unforeseen circumstances/emergency it is Owners' privilege to dry-dock and/or repair the vessel at any time during the currency of this Charter Party.
Clause 26 ...The Owners to remain responsible for.. . insurance.... same as when trading for their own account.
Clause 35 Trading
35.3 Any trading in areas declared as war zones by Lloyd's or banned by the UN/USA/EU or by the flag state is not allowed unless Owners' prior consent has been given, and against Charterers paying any extra insurance premiums and any crew bonuses which is not to exceed Lloyd's scale.
Clause 41 Insurance/P&I Cover
41.1 Owners warrant that throughout the currency of this Charterparty the vessel shall be fully covered by leading insurance companies/International P&I Clubs acceptable to the Charterers against Hull and Machinery, War and Protection and Indemnity Risk. Cost of such cover to be at the sole expense of the Owners with the exception of extra insurance cost that may be incurred as per clause 35- Trading.
41.2 If required by the Charterers, prior to the commencement of the Charter or at any other time, the Owners shall procure that the Managers of the Hull and Machinery insurance and the Protection and Indemnity Association shall give the Charterers proper evidence that the vessel is fully covered by the Owners.
41.3 Insurance full style and value
Hull and machinery: USD16,000,000 London, Norway and USA Markets
War Risks: Hellenic Mutual War Risk Association
Protection and Indemnity risks: UK P&I Club
The arbitration and the relevant parts of the Award
"A time charter will be frustrated or terminated not only by the actual total loss of the chartered ship, but also if she is so badly damaged that she has effectively been destroyed as a commercial ship or rendered unfit for the charter with no prospect of being made again fit: see Blane Steamships v. Minister of Transport [1951] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 155 (C.A.), a demise charter case. It is suggested that a time charter will also be frustrated or terminated by the constructive total loss of the chartered ship if she is abandoned by her owners to their underwriters"
"While there may be an issue as to whether these cases lay down a mechanistic rule as an implied term of a charterparty, viewed simply through the optic of the modem law of frustration, they are all perfectly explicable as instances where the Court has concluded that the performance required of the shipowner is radically different after the damage or casualty given that the cost of the repair far exceeds the value of the vessel and (using Maule J's words) falls outside what any prudent owner would do or would be expected to do in any realistic commercial sense."
"The vessel was in commercial terms a constructive total loss or a commercial loss. In commercial terms the vessel was one which was good only for scrapping or disposal on a 'wreck' basis. The obligation in these circumstances to repair the vessel so as to restore her to use was one which no prudent owner would undertake. To hold the Owners to that obligation to repair in so extreme a case would be to hold them to a wholly different bargain of a radically different nature such that they could fairly say: "Non haec in foedera veni. It was not this that I promised to do"."
"The principle which here applies is that there can be no discharge by supervening impossibility if the express terms of the contract bind the parties to performance notwithstanding that the supervening event may occur. As it was put by Lord Simon of Glaisdale in National Carriers v Panalpina [1981] AC 675 at 700, frustration of a contract only takes place where there supervenes an event "for which the contract makes no sufficient provision". Where the contract either specifically deals with the supervening event or, though it does not precisely refer to or cover the event, nevertheless evidences that the parties contemplated that event and made provision for it or allocated the risk in respect of it, frustration will be excluded."
"I consider that very clear words would be needed to achieve such an obligation. As Viscount Haldane stated in Bank Line v Capel [1919] AC 435 at 445:
'What is clear that where people enter into a contract which is dependent for the possibility of performance on the continued availability of the subject matter and that availability comes to an unforeseen end by reason of circumstances over which its owner had no control, the owner is not bound unless it is quite plain that he has contracted to do so.'
Given the well-settled case law peculiar to charterparties which lays down the general principle that a charterparty will usually be discharged where the vessel chartered is damaged such that the cost of repair exceeds the value of the vessel, it seems to me that a very clear provision would need to have been framed to bind an owner to repair on a different basis and to bind himself to use his hull insurance for that purpose."
The question of law
(1) Is there a general principle peculiar to charterparties (including time charterparties) that a charterparty will usually be discharged where the vessel chartered is damaged such that the cost of repair exceeds the value of the vessel?
(2) How can such rule, if any, be reconciled with the classic test for frustration, as formulated by Lord Radcliffe in Davis Contractors v Fareham UDC and Lord Simon in National Carriers v Panalpina and as applied to time charterparties in The Sea Angel?
(3) What is the effect on the doctrine of frustration of a clause in a time charterparty which requires that owners maintain H &M insurance at a stipulated level? In particular, is the insured value res inter alios acta when considering the owners' obligation to repair damage or does it create an assumption of risk and responsibility on the owners to repair hull damage up to this figure?
"(1) Question of Law (3) raises a question of law of general public importance. I do not accept that it will only arise on unusual facts. I am satisfied that the decision of the arbitrator on this question is open to serious doubt and that the other statutory requirements are met.
(2) Whilst Question of Law (3) is likely to involve a consideration of the law of frustration as it applies to time charterparties generally, I am not satisfied that questions of Law (1) and (2) are discrete issues of law which arise out of the award."
Summary of parties' submissions
The principles of the modern law of frustration
"The classical statement of the modem law is that of Lord Radcliffe in Davis Contractors Ltd. v. Fareham Urban District Council [1956] A.C.696 at 729:
"... frustration occurs whenever the law recognises that without default of either party a contractual obligation has become incapable of being performed because the circumstances in which performance is called for would render it a thing radically different from that which was undertaken by the contract. Non haec in foedera veni. It was not this that I promised to do."
As Lord Reid observed in the same case (at page 721):
"... there is no need to consider what the parties thought or how they or reasonable men in their shoes would have dealt with the new situation if they had foreseen it. The question is whether the contract which they did make is, on its true construction, wide enough to apply to the new situation: if it is not, then it is at an end."
Certain propositions, established by the highest authority, are not open to question:
1. The doctrine of frustration was evolved to mitigate the rigour of the common law's insistence on literal performance of absolute promises (Hirji Mulji v. Cheong Yue Steamship Co. Ltd. [1926] A.C.497 at 510: Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd. v. James B. Fraser & Co. Ltd. [1944] A.C.265 at 275; Joseph Constantine Steamship Line Ltd. v. Imperial Smelting Corporation Ltd. [1942] A.C.154 at 171). The object of the doctrine was to give effect to the demands of justice, to achieve a just and reasonable result, to do what is reasonable and fair, as an expedient to escape from injustice where such would result from enforcement of a contract in its literal terms after a significant change in circumstances (Hirji Mulji , supra, at 510; Joseph Constantine Steamship Line Ltd. (supra), at 183, 193; National Carriers Ltd. v. Panalpina (Northern) Ltd. [1981] A.C.675 at 701.
2. Since the effect of frustration is to kill the contract and discharge the parties from further liability under it, the doctrine is not to be lightly invoked, must be kept within very narrow limits and ought not to be extended (Bank Line Ltd. v. Arthur Capel & Co. [1919] A.C.435 at 459; Davis Contractors Ltd. supra, at 715, 727; Pioneer Shipping Ltd. v. B.T.P. Tioxide Ltd. (The Nema) [1982] A.C.724 at 752).
3. Frustration brings the contract to an end forthwith, without more and automatically (Hirji Mulji, supra, at 505, 509; Maritime National Fish Ltd. v. Ocean Trawlers Ltd. [1935] A.C.524 at 527; Joseph Constantine Steamship Line Ltd. supra, at 163, 170, 171, 187, 200; Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd. supra, at 274).
4. The essence of frustration is that it should not be due to the act or election of the party seeking to rely on it (Hirji Mulji , supra, at 510; Maritime National Fish Ltd. supra, at 530; Joseph Constantine Steamship Ltd. supra, at 170; Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd. supra, at 274; Davis Contractors Ltd. supra, at 728. A frustrating event must be some outside event or extraneous change of situation (Paal Wilson & Co. A/S v. Partenreederi Hannah Blumenthal (The Hannah Blumenthal) [1983] 1 A.C. 854 at 909).
5. A frustrating event must take place without blame or fault on the side of the party seeking to rely on it (Bank Line Ltd. supra, at 452; Joseph Constantine Steamship Ltd. supra, at 171; Davis Contractors Ltd. supra, at 729; The Hannah Blumenthal, supra, at 882,909).
[110] In the course of the parties' submissions we heard much to the effect that such and such a factor "excluded" or "precluded" the doctrine of frustration, or made it "inapplicable"; or, on the other side, that such and such a factor was critical or at least amounted to a prima facie rule. I am not much attracted by that approach, for I do not believe that it is supported by a fair reading of the authorities as a whole. Of course, the doctrine needs an overall test, such as that provided by Lord Radcliffe, if it is not to descend into a morass of quasi-discretionary decisions. Moreover, in any particular case, it may be possible to detect one, or perhaps more, particular factors which have driven the result there. However, the cases demonstrate to my mind that their circumstances can be so various as to defy rule making.
[111] In my judgment, the application of the doctrine of frustration requires a multi-factorial approach. Among the factors which have to be considered are the terms of the contract itself, its matrix or context, the parties' knowledge, expectations, assumptions and contemplations, in particular as to risk, as at the time of contract, at any rate so far as these can be ascribed mutually and objectively, and then the nature of the supervening event, and the parties' reasonable and objectively ascertainable calculations as to the possibilities of future performance in the new circumstances. Since the subject matter of the doctrine of frustration is contract, and contracts are about the allocation of risk, and since the allocation and assumption of risk is not simply a matter of express or implied provision but may also depend on less easily defined matters such as "the contemplation of the parties", the application of the doctrine can often be a difficult one. In such circumstances, the test of "radically different" is important: it tells us that the doctrine is not to be lightly invoked; that mere incidence of expense or delay or onerousness is not sufficient; and that there has to be as it were a break in identity between the contract as provided for and contemplated and its performance in the new circumstances.
[112] What the "radically different" test, however, does not in itself tell us is that the doctrine is one of justice, as has been repeatedly affirmed on the highest authority. Ultimately the application of the test cannot safely be performed without the consequences of the decision, one way or the other, being measured against the demands of justice. Part of that calculation is the consideration that the frustration of a contract may well mean that the contractual allocation of risk is reversed. A time charter is a good example. Under such a charter, the risk of delay, subject to express provision for the cessation of hire under an off-hire clause, is absolutely on the charterer. If, however, a charter is frustrated by delay, then the risk of delay is wholly reversed: the delay now falls on the owner. If the provisions of a contract in their literal sense are to make way for the absolving effect of frustration, then that must, in my judgment, be in the interests of justice and not against those interests. Since the purpose of the doctrine is to do justice, then its application cannot be divorced from considerations of justice. Those considerations are among the most important of the factors which a tribunal has to bear in mind."
"It is not an additional test, but it is a relevant factor which underlies all and provides the ultimate rationale of the doctrine. If one uses this factor as a reality check, its answer should conform with a proper assessment of the issue of frustration. If it does not appear to do so, it is probably a good indication of the need to think again."
The supposed general rule in charterparty cases
"So, if a ship sustains such extensive damage, that it would not be reasonably practicable to repair her, - seeing that the expense of repairs would be such that no man of common sense would incur the outlay, - the ship is said to be totally lost. It is in that way alone that the question as to what a prudent owner would do, arises. However damaged the ship may be, if it be practicable to repair her, so as to enable her to complete the adventure, she is not totally lost. The ordinary measure of prudence which the courts have adopted, is this, - if the ship, when repaired, will not be worth the sum which it would be necessary to expend upon her, the repairs are, practically speaking, impossible, and it is a case of total loss."
"The courts of law have also engrafted this qualification upon the contract, - that, if the damage which results from a peril of the sea, is so great that it cannot be repaired at all, or only at a cost so ruinously large that no prudent owner would undertake the repairs, the owner may treat the loss as total, and say that he is prevented by a peril of the sea from performing his contract. Now, what is the contract of the underwriter? That the owner shall not be deprived of his freight by perils of the sea. The jury have in this case found that the ship might have been repaired at an expense such as a prudent owner, uninsured, would have incurred, regard being had to the value of the ship, and that the ship would have been enabled by that expenditure to earn the freight. The owner, then, has not been prevented from earning the freight by a peril of the sea, when, at an expense which it was reasonable for him to incur, he might have earned the freight."
"The, underwriter undertakes to indemnify the owner against a loss of freight by perils of the sea. The law has fixed the meaning of this warranty against sea-damage in such [109] distinct terms, that, for many years, every contract of insurance has been made with reference to the known and recognised principle, that a ship is prevented from performing her voyage, and consequently from earning freight, when she has sustained damage which can only be repaired at an expense which no prudent owner uninsured would incur; and that is when the outlay will exceed that which he will get by it, viz. when the ship, after the repairs are executed, will not be worth the sum which has been expended upon her. The ship is prevented from earning freight, when she is by a peril of the sea damaged to that extent."
"But, in fact, the ship was got off, and she was taken to Gibraltar, where she could be repaired. What is the duty of the shipowner in such a case? His duty is to repair the ship, if it is possible for him to do so. That the ship in the present case could, in fact, be repaired cannot be denied. But, as Maule, J., said, in the case to which I have referred, the possibility must be a business possibility. If it is possible in a business sense of the word to repair the ship, the shipowner is bound to repair her. If the cost of the repairs necessary to enable her to complete the voyage contracted for would be more than the benefit which the owner would derive from them, then it would be impossible in a business sense to repair her.
....
In the present case the ship was repaired at Gibraltar, and the cost consisted of the expenses of the salvage of the ship and of the repairs necessary to bring her to London. We know that she was repaired sufficiently to enable her to reach Liverpool by a voyage longer than that provided for by the charterparty, at a cost of 7501. in addition to the expenses of salvage. Any reasonably sensible shipowner would have acted as these shipowners did up to the time when they went to law. The repairs were executed at a cost very far less than the value of the ship, and, that being so, no reasonable shipowner having regard to his own interests would have failed to do the repairs. The shipowners were prevented from performing the voyage, not by the perils of the sea, but by their own wilful disregard of their contract, or, at any rate, by their misreading of it. They were bound to bring to London all the cargo offered to them by the charterers which it was possible for them to bring, unless they were prevented from so doing by the perils of the sea, and they were not prevented by those perils. There is really no ground for the argument which has been addressed to us. The only colour for it is to be found in the suggestion that the case is governed by the rules applicable to what is known as "constructive loss." But the doctrine of constructive loss can arise only between an underwriter and his assured. There is no underwriter concerned in the present case, and the doctrine of constructive loss has no application to it. The shipowners' contract has been broken by them."
"Their only excuse for the non-performance of the voyage would be, that its performance was prevented by the perils of the sea. The ship went aground; but, in order to shew that she was prevented from performing the voyage agreed upon by the perils of the sea, she must have become unnavigable for that voyage, either on the ground that it was impossible to get her afloat again, or that, on account of the extraordinary expenditure necessary for that purpose, it would be unreasonable to require the shipowners to incur it. In the present case, so far from the ship being unnavigable, or having been treated as such, she was repaired, and was put into a condition fit for the performance of her voyage. The test, what is the state of circumstances which entitles the shipowner to abandon the voyage, is obviously applicable only when he acts upon it; and if, whatever the expense of repairing the ship may be, he submits to incur it, it would be absurd to discuss the question of constructive loss."
"That learned judge also is discussing the measure of prudence which will justify the shipowner in abandoning the voyage, and is not referring to a case in which the ship has been actually put afloat again. In the present case, the answer to the contention of the shipowners is, that the ship never was unnavigable, that she never was incapable of performing her voyage. Even assuming that the circumstances were such as would have justified the owners in abandoning the voyage, they never adopted that course. If the argument for the appellants be right, it must go to this length, that the ship would have been incapable of performing the voyage, even though she had actually performed it with all the cargo on board. This is a reductio ad absurdum. The fallacy consists in applying to a case in which the ship was not in fact prevented from performing the voyage the test of the measure of prudence which would justify the owner in not performing it."
"The test is the same, under the freight policy and under the charterparty - namely, whether the shipowner has been prevented either in a physical sense or in a business sense from performing the freight contract, so that the freight is lost.
In this way a question has to be solved analogous to that which arises when it is claimed on a hull policy on the ground of cost of repairs that there has been a constructive total loss of ship. But the three contracts, the charterparty, the freight insurance and the hull insurance are completely different."
"Before turning to a consideration of the authorities which bear upon the question under discussion, I will summarize the conclusions to which my examination of the principle has led me. (1.) In all cases where repair is possible, the prima facie duty of the shipowner under his contract of affreightment is to carry out such repairs to the ship (whether temporary or permanent and complete, as the case may be) as may be necessary to enable her to carry the cargo to its destination. (2.) This duty is not affected by the fact that as between the shipowner and his hull underwriter, if any, the case may, or would, be one of constructive total loss of ship, a fact which is not relevant to the consideration of the duties of the shipowner under the contract of affreightment. (3.) The shipowner is excused from the duty to carry out the appropriate repairs (whether temporary or permanent and complete, as the case may be) if he can prove that the cost of doing so would exceed the repaired value of the vessel. (4.) A consideration of the cost of repairs, which are not the appropriate repairs in the particular case, is irrelevant."
"The rule expressed in cases like The Bessie Morris that in commercial contracts commercial prevention is equivalent to physical prevention has therefore to be harmonized with this rule of holding a man to his contract though it be financially to his own let or hindrance. Both rules are fundamental and the solution must transgress neither. The way of escape from the antinomy in my view lies in a third principle of the law of contract - that a contract may be intended by both parties to be dependent for their mutual benefit upon some basic condition, such as the continued existence or availability of a particular thing, or state of affairs, so that if the condition fails the contract is discharged, or at any rate becomes unenforceable: Taylor v. Caldwell, or Jackson v. Union Marine Insurance Co., or Bank Line v. Capel, and see also Comptoir Commercial Anversois v. Power, Scrutton on Charterparties (13th ed.), pp. 110 et seq., and the cases there cited. The basic condition under the charterparty here (at any rate with the shipowner's common law liberty of transhipment excluded from it by the policy restriction of the venture to performance by the Mount Taygetus alone) was the continued existence and availability of the Mount Taygetus throughout the voyage.
If the Mount Taygetus should be at any time during the contract voyage rendered by sea perils incapable of completing the voyage within a reasonable time so as to earn the freight, then whether the incapability was physical or commercial the basic condition of the contract would be broken, and the charterparty contract ipso facto discharged, as Lord Sumner said in Bank Line v. Capel, or at any rate each party would have the option of treating the contract as at an end. On that footing it is clear that if the ship as a merchant ship employed in a shipowner's business should be so damaged that as one of his fleet and an asset of his business it would not be worth his while to incur the cost of repair, the ship would be commercially lost and the basic condition would be broken; the charterer's right to insist on carriage of the cargo to destination, and the owner's to insist on payment of freight, would both lapse."
"It is clear from the decision of the House of Lords in Bank Line Ltd. v. Arthur Capel & Co. that the principle of frustration of the adventure applies to a time charter. It seems to me that one must imply into the contract between the parties that the ship must remain capable of carrying out the purposes for which she was hired; in other words, if her use for the purposes of the hire became impossible during the continuance of the term for which she was hired, the charterparty automatically came to an end. I am content to rest my judgment on the test put by Scott, L.J. [in Kulukundis], in a different class of case, "Whether the facts in evidence are sufficient to establish a commercial loss of the 'ship' judged by the charterparty criterion". There is nothing in this inconsistent with the terms of the charterparty itself. Indeed, cl. 8 supports the view I have formed."
"The theory of dissolution of a contract by the frustration of its commercial object rests on an implication, which arises from the presumed common intention of the parties. 'Where the contract makes provision' (that is, full and complete provision, so intended) 'for a given contingency it is not for the court to import into the contract some other and different provision for the same contingency called by a different name': Bailhache, J. This is a matter of construction according to the usual rule. A contingency may be provided for, but not in such terms as to show that the provision is meant to be all the provision for it. A contingency may be provided for, but in such a way as shows that it is provided for, only for the purpose of dealing with one of its effects and not with all".
"The enquiry must always commence with a careful analysis of the contract to determine whether it is capable of accommodating the changed circumstances: put another way, are the changed circumstances within the contractual allocation of risk?"
"Some judgments adopt an implied contractual term as the juristic basis of the doctrine of frustration: e.g. Tamplin (FA) Steamship Co Ltd v Anglo- Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd [1916] 2 AC 397 at p.404; Larrinaga & Co v Societe Franco-Americaine des Phosphates de Medulla (1923) 29 Com. Cas. 1 at p. 11. Modem formulations favour a rule of law, but one that affords due priority to the contract in responding to post-formation changes of circumstance. Indeed, emphasising that priority has been said to be a virtue of an implied term analysis: Joseph Constantine Steamship Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] AC 154 at p.163."
Whether the charterparty on its correct construction was frustrated
"In reaching a conclusion on this matter I take as my starting point the fact that an owner's obligation under a time charter is merely to make the ship available to the charterers and to provide the services of a master and crew to sail the ship for the charterers' purposes. Many matters remain within the discretion of the owner. Clause 1 of the charterparty in this case defined in general terms the owners' obligations and the areas of their responsibility. Clause 26 was in the same sense. I do not consider that in this context the words 'insurance of the vessel' in cl. 1 should be construed narrowly. The extent of the cover is a matter for the discretion of the owners though that discretion is to be exercised according to the standards of a prudent owner."
Conclusion