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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 >> Sevylor Shipping And Trading Corp v Altfadul Company for Foods, Fruits & Livestock & Anor [2018] EWHC 629 (Comm) (23 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2018/629.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 629 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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SEVYLOR SHIPPING AND TRADING CORP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ALTFADUL COMPANY FOR FOODS, FRUITS & LIVESTOCK (2) SIAT SOCIETA ITALIANA ASSICURAZIONI E RIASSICURAZIONI S.P.A. |
Defendants |
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Robert Thomas QC & Thomas Steward (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 15, 16 February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
See Order at bottom of this judgment.
Mr Justice Andrew Baker :
Introduction
Questions Arising
i) Whether s.2(4) of COGSA 1992 operates where rights of suit under the bill of lading contract have not previously been vested in the party which has suffered loss, or whether it only operates where rights of suit were previously vested in that party but it has lost them by virtue of the operation of s.2(1) of the Act;
ii) Where the charterers of a vessel suffer loss and damage but no longer pursue a claim against the carrier under the charter party, can the lawful holder of the bill of lading claim for the charterers' loss under the bill of lading contract by virtue of s.2(4) of COGSA 1992, or can the lawful holder of the bill of lading only claim under that provision for losses suffered by parties which have no rights of suit under any relevant contract of carriage?
ii) Whether the lawful holder of the bill of lading can claim by virtue of s.2(4) of COGSA 1992 loss suffered by the charterer of the vessel in respect of the bill of lading voyage whose charterparty was with the bill of lading carrier.
iii) Whether on the facts found in the award, Altfadul (and therefore SIAT) was entitled to damages equal to the full value of the cargo damage irrespective of any recovery or entitlement to recover from its seller, CoMaCo.
i) Altfadul's own recoverable loss was US$1,981,246.04, since in a claim in respect only of its own loss it would have to give credit for the US$2,586,105.09 promised to it by CoMaCo.
ii) However, under s.2(4) Altfadul could also claim loss suffered by CoMaCo and the US$2,586,105.09 it promised Altfadul represented such a loss.
Question (iii)
i) R&W Paul is doubtful authority at best because it was based upon a contractual title to sue under the Bills of Lading Act 1855 rather than COGSA 1992.
ii) There have been developments in the law of res inter alios acta since 1937. Swynson Ltd v Lowick Rose LLP (in liquidation) [2017] UKSC 32, [2017] 2 WLR 1161 was cited, but that gnomic observation was not otherwise explained or elaborated.
I do not think that that matter affects the plaintiff's right to sue at all; if they have a right to sue the ship, what they have to do with the damages by reason of some other transaction they may have entered into does not seem to me to affect the case at all.
and
I do not think that Mr. Mocatta [for the shipowner] has seriously contended that the fact that Messrs. Paul had been compensated by Messrs. Broster, who were merely intermediate purchasers, really affected the question at all; it would only affect the ultimate destination of the damages, because I have no doubt that Messrs. Paul will have to account to Messrs. Broster. Under those circumstances, it seems to me it is enough to say that Messrs. Paul had a title to sue for damages in this case by virtue of the Bills of Lading Act. Also, it seems to me that they must have a right to sue by virtue of the implied contract following on the decision in Brandt's case, they being the people who, it is conceded, paid the shipowner, and took delivery from the shipowner.
(The reference to Brandt's case is a reference to Brandt v Liverpool, Brazil & River Plate Steam Navigation Co Ltd [1924] 1 KB 575.)
Yet another aspect of the law with which the novel and erroneous proposition of the carriers before me comes into conflict is the established law about remoteness of damages and mitigation in relation to maritime contracts. As will be apparent from the article in Scrutton to which I have already referred [19th Ed., Art.194; now 23rd Ed., Art.212] and the cases there cited [one of which was and is R&W Paul], the provisions of contracts of sale and purchase to which the goods owner is a party are, in the absence of special circumstances, res inter alios acta which are not to be taken into account in assessing the damages to be paid to the goods owner. (Of course, at an earlier stage, when the plaintiff is seeking to establish his title to sue, he does need to establish his ownership of the goods and this may involve an examination of the contracts of sale and purchase to which he was a party.) … The carriers of goods are not concerned, in the absence of special circumstances, with rights of indemnity or rights to recover or recoup the price, or rights to damages as between goods owners and mercantile parties with whom they may be in contractual relations. Such considerations are too remote.
COGSA 1992
2. Rights under shipping documents.
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, a person who becomes-
(a) the lawful holder of a bill of lading;
(b) the person who (without being an original party to the contract of carriage) is the person to whom delivery of the goods to which a sea waybill relates is to be made by the carrier in accordance with that contract; or
(c) the person to whom delivery of the goods to which a ship's delivery order relates is to be made in accordance with the undertaking contained in the order,
shall (by virtue of becoming the holder of the bill or, as the case may be, the person to whom delivery is to be made) have transferred to and vested in him all rights of suit under the contract of carriage as if he had been a party to that contract.
(2) Where, when a person becomes the lawful holder of a bill of lading, possession of the bill no longer gives a right (as against the carrier) to possession of the goods to which the bill relates, that person shall not have any rights transferred to him by virtue of subsection (1) above unless he becomes the holder of the bill-
(a) by virtue of a transaction effected in pursuance of any contractual or other arrangements made before the time when such a right to possession ceased to attach to possession of the bill; or
(b) as a result of the rejection to that person by another person of goods or documents delivered to the other person in pursuance of any such arrangements.
(3) The rights vested in any person by virtue of the operation of subsection (1) above in relation to a ship's delivery order-
(a) shall be so vested subject to the terms of the order; and
(b) where the goods to which the order relates form a part only of the goods to which the contract of carriage relates, shall be confined to rights in respect of the goods to which the order relates.
(4) Where, in the case of any documents to which this Act applies-
(a) a person with any interest or right in or in relation to goods to which the document relates sustains loss or damage in consequence of a breach of the contract of carriage; but
(b) subsection (1) above operates in relation to that document so that rights of suit in respect of that breach are vested in another person,
the other person shall be entitled to exercise those rights for the benefit of the person who sustained the loss or damage to the same extent as they could have been exercised if they had been vested in the person for whose benefit they are exercised.
(5) Where rights are transferred by virtue of the operation of subsection (1) above in relation to any document, the transfer for which that subsection provides shall extinguish any entitlement to those rights which derives-
(a) where that document is a bill of lading, from a person's having been an original party to the contract of carriage; or
(b) in the case of any documents to which this Act applies, from the previous operation of that subsection in relation to that document;
but the operation of that subsection shall be without prejudice to any rights which derive from a person's having been an original party to the contract contained in, or evidenced by, a sea waybill and, in relation to a ship's delivery order, shall be without prejudice to any rights deriving otherwise than from the previous operation of that subsection in relation to that order.
i) There were goods to which a shipping document the subject of the Act related (see s.2(4)(a)). That was plainly the case here.
ii) The acts or omissions constituting a breach of the contract of carriage contained in or evidenced by that shipping document (the careful phrasing is deliberate, see paragraph 61 below) caused loss or damage to be sustained by a party ('L') with an "interest or right in or in relation to [the] goods" (see s.2(4)(a) again). No point was raised in relation to that requirement here, either generally or as to whether L's interest or right in or in relation to the goods must exist when it suffers loss. The argument proceeded on the basis that the credit promised by CoMaCo to Altfadul was loss suffered by CoMaCo, and was caused by the claimant's failure carefully to keep and carry the bananas (etc), and that CoMaCo was a party with a relevant interest or right in or in relation to the goods.
iii) Rights of suit in respect of that breach were vested by s.2(1) in another party ('H') (see s.2(4)(b)). Here, that was Altfadul (from whom SIAT as assignee then had the benefit of those rights).
Question (i)
Attaching rights of suit under the contract of carriage to the status of lawful holder of the bill of lading raises the possibility of dislocation of the incidence of loss and the right to sue, resulting as a matter of principle in losses being irrecoverable by the only party entitled to bring suit. Accordingly, s.2(4) of the 1992 Act provides that where a party with any interest in the goods suffers loss or damage by reason of a breach of the contract of carriage, but, by virtue of s.2(1), another party is entitled to sue in respect of that breach, the party in whom s.2(1) has vested the rights of suit is entitled to exercise those rights for the benefit of the party that has suffered the loss and damage to the same extent as they could have been exercised if they had been vested in the loss sustainer.
Mr Schaff's argument was at best circular because in that passage the learned editors of Scrutton simply use a "but, by virtue of" construct reflecting the "but … so that" construct of s.2(4) itself. In fact, if anything, I think the passage supports the rejection of Mr Schaff's argument. As paraphrased there, the touchstone for s.2(4) to operate is simply that someone other than the loss sustainer is the person with title to sue under s.2(1), and the target of the provision, without limitation or further specificity, is the case where there is a dislocation between the incidence of loss and the incidence of the right to sue.
Question (ii)
Conclusion
AND IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
UPON the final hearing of an appeal by the Claimant under section 69 of the Arbitration Act 1996 against an arbitration award of Mr David Martin-Clark, Timothy Young QC and Richard Rayfield dated 7 August 2017, brought with leave granted by Mr Justice Bryan on 31 October 2017
AND UPON hearing Leading Counsel for the Claimant and Leading Counsel for the Defendants
AND UPON the court having handed down its judgment on the appeal [2018] EWHC 629 (Comm), and for the reasons given in that judgment
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. The Claimant's appeal is dismissed.
2. All questions of costs and any other consequential matters arising are adjourned to Tuesday 27 March 2018, time estimate 30 minutes.