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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> LJ Korbetis v Transgrain Shipping BV [2005] EWHC 1345 (QB) (17 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2005/1345.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1345 (QB) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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L. J. KORBETIS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TRANSGRAIN SHIPPING BV |
Defendant |
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MR. R. ASWANI for the RESPONDENT
Hearing dates : Friday, 17th June 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Toulson:
"All disputes from time to time arising out of this contract shall, unless the parties forthwith agree on a single Arbitrator, be referred to the final arbitrament of two Arbitrators, carrying on business in London, who shall be Members of the Baltic and engaged in the Shipping and/or Grain Trades, one to be appointed by each of the parties with power to such Arbitrators to appoint an Umpire. The Arbitrators shall be members of the London Maritime Arbitrators' Association, and the Rules for arbitration processings of that Arbitration shall apply. Any claim must be made in writing and Claimant's Arbitrator appointed within 12 months of final discharge and where this provision is not complied with the claim shall be deemed to be waived and absolutely barred. No award shall be questioned or invalidated on the ground that any of the Arbitrators is not qualified as above unless objection to his acting be taken before the award is made."
"The disputes include owners' claim for demurrage and/or final balance of account and/or damages and/or an indemnity in relation to discharge of a cargo carried pursuant to the charter, including delays/detention of the vessel and/or third party claims concerning the condition of the cargo, as well as claims for interest and costs."
The fax continued:
"On 5th April 2004, we told charterers that owners accepted their proposal to appoint you as sole arbitrator in respect of all the disputes arising out of the charterparty (please find attached copies of our exchange). When we spoke to you, however, we realised that charterers had not yet provided you with details concerning your appointment, and therefore we have done so as confirmed in writing by this fax."
On 31st December 2004, Mr. Rayment sent a fax to both parties confirming
acceptance of his appointment.
"The general rule is that an acceptance has no legal effect until it is communicated to the offeror."
Mr. Lewis on behalf of the owners relied on the well established rule dating back to Adams v. Lindsell (1818) 1 B & Ald 681, and confirmed by the Court of Appeal in Entores v. Miles [1955] 2 QB 327, that an acceptance by post is complete as soon as the letter is put into the post-box. But those cases assume that the letter has been properly addressed. If it has been properly addressed, the acceptor commits himself practically as well as legally by posting it. At that moment the die is cast. The likelihood of non-delivery is remote. Mishaps occur, but if such a mishap occurs, it is not the fault of the acceptor. From a pragmatic viewpoint, the rule of law is generally satisfactory, although Chitty accurately comments, in paragraph 2.046, that the rule favours the offeree for reasons which it is unnecessary to elaborate.
"Misdirected letter of acceptance. A letter of acceptance may be lost or delayed because it bears a wrong or an incomplete address, or because it is not properly stamped. Normally such defects would be due to the carelessness of the offeree, and although there is no English authority precisely on point, it is submitted that the postal rule should not apply to such cases. Although an offeror may have to take the risk of accidents in the post, it would be unreasonable to impose on him the further risk of the acceptor's carelessness. These arguments do not apply where the misdirection is due to the fault of the offeror, e.g. where his own address is incompletely or illegibly given in the offer itself. In such a case, the offeror shall not be allowed to rely on the fact that the acceptance was misdirected, except perhaps where his error in stating his own address was obvious to the offeree, for in such a case the offeror's fault would not be the effective cause of the misdirection of the acceptance. It is submitted that a misdirected acceptance should take effect, if at all, at the time which is least favourable to the party responsible for the misdirection."
I agree with that general approach, because it seems to me to correspond with principle and justice.
"The court shall make an order only if satisfied (a) that the circumstances are such as were outside the reasonable contemplation of the parties when they agreed the provision in question, and that it would be just to extend the time, or (b) that the conduct of one party makes it unjust to hold the other party to the strict terms of the provision in question."
The owners rely on Section 12(3)(a). Mr. Lewis submitted that there were a number of circumstances outside the parties' reasonable contemplation. In particular, he relied on the illness of the principal case handler, the unfortunate slip made by Mr. Merrylees' secretary, and the absence of any response from the mystery recipient which would have alerted the owners to what had gone wrong. There was, he submitted, an unfortunate combination of events which the parties could not reasonably have foreseen. He also submitted that it would be just to extend the period, because the charterers have suffered no prejudice. There is no suggestion on the evidence that the charterers could not defend the claim as well now as if the claim had been started in time, subject to the obvious point of their limitation defence.
"The actual mistake on further refinement can be said to be a failure to read the provisions which had been agreed. If one were to pose the question whether it would be contemplated by the parties that they would not even read the provision that they had agreed when contemplating operating the provision, the sensible answer would seem to be that one could not even reasonably contemplate that. Does that mean that the clearer it is that the circumstance is one that the parties would not have contemplated as happening, or contemplated as one for which an extension of time would not be allowed if it had been asked for, the more likely it is that the circumstance is not one within the reasonable contemplation of the parties? In my view that cannot be the proper construction of the subsection. The subsection is concerned with party autonomy. Its aim seems to me to be to allow the Court to consider an extension in relation to circumstances where the parties would not reasonably have contemplated them as being ones where the time bar would apply, or to put it the other way round, the section is concerned not to allow the Court to interfere with a contractual bargain, unless the circumstances are such that if they had been drawn to the attention of the parties when they agreed the provision, the parties would at the very least have contemplated that the time bar might not apply: it then being for the Court finally to rule as to whether justice required an extension of time to be given."
"In this very case it [the above construction] enables circumstances such as a failure to read provisions which might not be reasonably contemplated to be circumstances which do not trigger consideration of an entitlement to an extension of time. "
"I should add that albeit if a circumstance was within the control of a party seeking an extension, that might be a material factor in assessing the significance of the circumstance; I would not think that control alone disqualifies a circumstance from being one to which the subsection applies. I am not sure that this was the Judge's view, but in case the reference to control is so interpreted, it is right to be clear about the matter. Thus, for example, if a notice to arbitrate was put through the wrong letterbox by the relevant party, that might be said to be within the control of that party at least to some extent, but that might be an example of a case where Section 12(3) could apply."