BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Canmer International Inc v UK Mutual Steamship Assurance Association (Bermuda) Ltd [2005] EWHC 1694 (Comm) (28 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/1694.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1694 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Canmer International Inc |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
UK Mutual Steamship Assurance Association (Bermuda) Limited |
Defendant |
|
MV "Rays" |
____________________
Ms Anna Gotts (instructed by Messrs Richards Butler) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 12th & 13th April 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Gloster, DBE:
Factual Background
The Bills of Lading Reference
i) ConAgra Naples claimed damages from Seatex in the sum of US$321,636.94, arising from loss of and damage to the cargo carried on board the Vessel. This claim was made pursuant to the terms of the Bills of Lading.The Voyage Charter Reference
ii) ConAgra Canada claimed damages from the Claimant in the sum of US$321,636.94 under the Voyage Charter for the same loss of, and damage to, the cargo. The Claimant counterclaimed for freight and demurrage.
The Time Charter Reference
iii) The Claimants claimed, inter alia, an indemnity from Seatex in respect of any liability they may have to ConAgra Canada under the Voyage Charter. This claim was made pursuant to the terms of the Time Charter.
"At the hearing the Owners … maintained as an issue [ConAgra Canada's] title to sue. … The decision in the Sanix Ace [1987] 1 Lloyd's Rep 465 is authority for the proposition that [ConAgra Canada] had title to sue for damage occurring during their ownership even though the risk may have passed. We agree with the submission made by Counsel for [ConAgra Canada] that insofar as the goods were not at [ConAgra Canada's] risk they are entitled to an award but would hold any net sums actually recovered for the party at whose risks the goods were (in these references, [ConAgra Naples])". (Paragraphs 26 to 28).
"Although both [ConAgra Canada] and [ConAgra Naples] are entitled to their separate Awards, it is clear that both cannot receive and retain the full amounts awarded to them. The maximum total amount, exclusive of interest, to be paid by [Seatex] and/or Canmer is $284,194.74. It is, of course, for the parties to resolve between themselves the mechanics of how funds in payment of the Awards are to be treated, including the means of accounting between [ConAgra Canada] and [ConAgra Naples]. At this stage, therefore, we make no decision and leave it to the parties to use their good sense. However, if the parties are not able to agree payments and necessary accounting details, then we reserve to ourselves the power to make Awards in that regard." (Paragraph 113).
"RAYS at Manfredonia on 20th October 2000
Time charter dated 18th August 2000/ 6 bills of lading dated Duluth/Superior 14th September 2000 in particular in respect of costs incurred in 3 arbitration awards dated 9th April 2003
In consideration of your releasing and/or refraining from arresting or otherwise detaining the M/V RAYS or any other vessel or property in the same or associated ownership, management, possession or control for the purpose of obtaining security in respect of your claim under the above charter including legal costs incurred in connection with the matters which became the subject of 3 arbitration awards dated 9th April 2003 which may now or hereafter become due to you in respect thereof, we hereby undertake to pay you on demand such sum as may be due to you from owners of the M/V RAYS, Seatex Shipping Company Ltd, Nicosia, Cyprus, in respect of your said claim and legal costs against owners by agreement between the parties or upon first and any subsequent written demand pursuant to the final arbitration award of Messrs Farrington, Rayment and Faint dated 9th April 2003 and/or upon first and any subsequent written demand following any further final award of a competent arbitration tribunal or following an appeal therefrom by a final judgement of the High Court in London against the owners provided always that our liability hereunder inclusive of interest and costs shall not exceed the sum of US$525,000 (US Dollars Five Hundred and Twenty Five Thousand)".
The undertaking was expressly stated to be governed by English law and any dispute was subjected to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English High Court.
"RAYS at Manfredonia on 20th October 2000
Time charter dated 18th August 2000
We confirm that we agree to settle and pay your clients' costs in the head charter arbitration in the sum of US$75,000 which amount we are forthwith instructing our accounts department to pay as soon as possible.
We also confirm that we are remitting to HFW the sum of US$315,000 in respect of the principal and interest under their award but in the event that this remittance is not actually made (for reasons unforeseen and which we cannot conceive would occur) we will increase the security to your clients by the same amount."
"In response to your demand dated 9th May 2003 and in part satisfaction of the [UK Club's] obligations under its letter of undertaking provided by the UK Club dated 6th November 2000, we have remitted to your nominated bank account the sum of US$ 315,000."
"MV "RAYS" – Arbitration Award 9th April 2003
We confirm that we have found in our client account the sum of US$315,000 directly remitted by yourselves.
Our Clients are only prepared to accept this remittance as a payment on behalf of Owners in satisfaction of the demand letter dated 9 May 2003 and not as a payment pursuant to the Association's letter of undertaking dated 6 November 2000, under which as you know our clients have not as yet made any demand. We reserve all our Clients' rights in this respect.
We made our Clients' position in relation to payment clear to Owners' Solicitors on Friday 16 May 2003. We enclose a copy of our letter to Messrs Rayfield Mills of 16 May. On the understanding that the Association would not seek to resile from this our Clients refrained from executing against the vessel in Togo.
We do not accept the money on any other basis. On the assumption that this is acceptable to you and to the Owners we will retain the money, but if this is not acceptable to you and to the Owners we will hold it to your order pending all outstanding matters being resolved and without prejudice to the Association's letter of Undertaking dated 6 November 2003 which remains as yet uncalled. Should this not be acceptable to you and Owners it will be open to you to seek recovery of it."
The issues between the parties
i) Constructionthat the LOU, on its proper construction, does not cover the Time Charter Award but is, in fact, restricted to the Voyage Charter costs only;ii) Estoppel
that Canmer is estopped by convention and/or acquiescence and/or representation from making its claim; the common assumption, as formulated by Miss Anna Gotts on behalf of the UK Club in the course of her submissions, being that the LOU would not respond to a demand for payment of principal and/or that no sum could be due to Canmer within the meaning of the LOU, save in circumstances where the US$ 315,000 had not been remitted to HFW and application had been made to increase the security of Canmer's claim in that amount;iii) Collateral oral contract
that Jackson Parton, on behalf of Canmer, entered into a concluded oral contract, an implied, if not express, term of which was a promise by Canmer that it would make no demand under the LOU for the principal and interest and would not pursue any claim against the UK Club for the same, the basis of which was the UK Club's agreement to settle Canmer's costs in the Time Charter reference and the UK Club's undertaking to increase the security provided to Canmer in the event that the principal sum was not remitted to ConAgra Naples by the UK Club;iv) Rectification
that if, contrary to the UK Club's primary submissions, the LOU responds to Canmer's claim for principal, then it does not reflect the parties' common intentions and accordingly should be rectified; andv) No sums due
that, on its true construction, the LOU only covers sums actually "due to" Canmer from Seatex and no such sums are actually due, because of the remittance by the UK Club to HFW.
Construction
"Thus, in principle, all contracts must be construed in light of their factual background, that background being ascertained on an objective basis. Accordingly, the fact that a document appears to have a clear meaning on the face of it does not prevent, or indeed excuse, the Court from looking at the background".
"If detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of words in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion that flouts business commonsense, it must be made to yield to business commonsense".
i) On its proper construction, in the context in which it was issued, the LOU confers upon Canmer an entitlement to make demand only in respect of costs and not in respect of principal.ii) It is common ground that, by the express terms of the LOU, the UK Club has undertaken to pay to Canmer on demand such sum as may be due to it from Seatex in respect of its claim under the Time Charter and legal costs against Seatex.
iii) However, the phrase "your said claim and legal costs against owners" must not be construed in isolation. The LOU must be construed as a whole and the heading of the LOU makes absolutely plain the common intention of the parties to limit its application to demands made by Canmer in respect of costs incurred in the three references.
iv) In addition, the LOU as a document must not be construed in isolation. It forms part of a wider transaction between the parties of which the side letter, at least, was part. In the event that the UK Club failed to remit the principal and interest to ConAgra Naples, the side letter imposed upon the UK Club a corresponding obligation to increase the security provided to Canmer in like amount. Accordingly, to uphold the construction of the LOU advanced by Canmer would be to treat the UK Club's printed LOU as though it stood alone, requiring the strictness of construction appropriate to commercial documents of a standard form. It would be to render paragraph 2 of the side letter, an intrinsic part of the overall transaction, entirely meaningless.
v) In the circumstances, the phrase "your said claim" is properly to be construed as referring to Canmer's claim for an indemnity in respect of the costs it has incurred and/or for which it was held liable under the Voyage Charter Award. The phrase "legal costs against owners", by contrast, is properly to be construed as referring to those costs which Canmer will incur in pursuing the "said claim".
vi) The reasonable person would therefore conclude, that the LOU confers an entitlement upon Canmer to demand and/or imposes an obligation upon the UK Club to make payment in respect of costs alone.
vii) Alternatively, and even if the construction contended for by Canmer could be "inferred", the reasonable person would – in light of the factual background - conclude that something had gone wrong with the wording of the LOU. This is because the reasonable person would know:
a) that, on 6 November 2000, the UK Club provided ConAgra Naples with an LOU in the sum of US$440,000 as security for the cargo claim under the Bills of Lading;b) that paragraph 113 of the Arbitrators' Reasons stipulates that the maximum total amount to be paid by Seatex and/or Canmer in respect of the principal and exclusive of interest is US$284,194.74 and that those Reasons form part of the Time Charter Award;c) that the LOU was intended to provide Canmer with sufficient security to cover the amount of its potential claims against Seatex;d) that, in a telephone conversation between Mr Roberts (of Jackson Parton for Canmer) and Mr Mills (of Rayfield Mills for the UK Club) on 16 May 2003, Mr Mills represented that the UK Club was willing both to settle Canmer's costs in the Time Charter reference in the sum of US$75,000 and to remit to ConAgra Naples the sum of US$315,000 in satisfaction of the Bills of Lading Award;e) that the effect of such payments would be to limit the scope of Canmer's potential claims against Seatex to claims for the costs it incurred and/or for which it would be liable in the Voyage Charter reference;f) that the effect of such payments would therefore also be to reduce the amount of security required by Canmer since security would not be required in respect of the cargo claim itself;g) that, in a later telephone conversation between Mr Roberts and Mr Mills on 16 May 2003, Mr Roberts accordingly proposed that the UK Club provide security to Canmer in the sum of US$650,000, which sum represented Canmer's potential remaining exposure to ConAgra Canada in respect of the costs incurred by it in the Voyage Charter reference;h) that in a subsequent e-mail dated 16 May 2003, Mr Mills proposed that security be provided in the lesser sum of US$525,000, which figure was calculated simply by deducting the amount of ConAgra Naples' residual security from the figure of US$650,000 proposed by Mr Roberts;i) that Mr Roberts agreed to the provision of security in the sum of US$525,000 on the condition that, if the payment to ConAgra Naples was withheld, the UK Club would agree to increase the security provided so as to cover Canmer's revived liability to ConAgra Canada in respect of the principal sum.viii) She submitted that, possessed with that knowledge, the reasonable person could be in no doubt as to the scope of the LOU. He would appreciate that the construction contended for by Canmer would flout business commonsense. He would appreciate that such a construction would expose the UK Club to paying twice for the same claim and would be contrary to the Reasons for the Awards. He would appreciate therefore that the parties had made an obvious mistake in recording their agreement. Accordingly, the UK Club is not obliged to make the payment sought.
"There comes a point at which the court should remind itself that the task is to discover what the parties meant from what they have said, and that to force upon the words a meaning which they cannot fairly bear is to substitute for the bargain actually made one which the court believes could better have been made. This is an illegitimate role for a court. Particularly in the field of commerce, where the parties need to know what they must do and what they can insist on not doing, it is essential for them to be confident that they can rely on the court to enforce their contract according to its terms. Certainly, if in the present case the result of finding a condition precedent would be anomalous there would be good reason for the court to look twice, and more than twice, at the words used to see whether they might bear some other meaning. In the end, however, the parties must be held to their bargain."
Estoppel, oral collateral contract and rectification
"… In view of the arbitrators' comments in the Reasons for their awards, we trust you will agree that the payment of $315,000 discharges any liability that our clients may have to remit $284,194.74 to your clients …"
"… The security obtained by Canmer is essentially in respect of Canmer's exposure to ConAgra's legal costs and, as we believe Holmans are aware, the level of security was reduced to take account of the $315,000 remittance…"
i) that he failed to object to the fact that payment should be made to ConAgra Canada; that he never suggested that demurrage should be retained;ii) that he suggested that security should be in the sum of $525,000 (i.e. the costs);
iii) that it was he who suggested the side letter, from which the only reasonable inference to be drawn is that the LOU was not intended to respond to principal;
iv) that at opportune moments in the course of the correspondence, Mr Roberts failed to make the position clear that there might be an objection by the Conagra parties to payment on a conditional basis;
v) that he should have specifically referred to the possibility of non-acceptance of any remittance by the Conagra parties if he was concerned about the matter.
i) a prudent solicitor would always record the terms of any settlement or release of an arrest in writing;ii) that was certainly his practice;
iii) he had not recorded the alleged terms of the collateral agreement in any letter sent to Jackson Parton;
iv) nor had he recorded it in any letter sent to his clients, the UK Club;
v) nor was it recorded in any contemporaneous note of his;
vi) neither he nor Mr Roberts ever articulated the terms allegedly agreed;
vii) those terms represented his legal view of the situation, and he believed that Mr Roberts shared it but Mr Roberts at no time said that he did.
No sums due
i) it imposes an independent, autonomous obligation on the UK Club to pay Canmer on any demand stated to be based upon:a) any agreement between the parties;b) the Time Charter Award; and/orc) any further award or High Court judgment(as Canmer contends); or, alternatively,ii) it imposes a secondary, pre-condition to payment, in addition to a demand, namely the requirement that Canmer has to prove that the sum demanded is actually due from Seatex to Canmer at the time of the demand (as the UK Club contends)
"identify the contractual events which trigger the right to call the refund guarantees in the same way as the bond in Esal referred to the underlying liability."
as the Court of Appeal stated in Gold Coast v. Caja de Ahorros [2002] 1 Lloyd's Rep 617 at paragraphs 21 – 26. In support of this submission that the LOU imposed primary, autonomous liability upon the UK Club, he referred to Esal (Commodities) Ltd v. Oriental Credit Ltd [1985] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 546 (CA). In that case, the guarantor bank had "undertake[n] to pay the said amount on your written demand in the event that the supplier fails to execute the contract in perfect performance .…" The Court of Appeal held that, absent clear evidence of known fraud, the guarantor was bound to pay upon any demand stated to be based on the supplier's failure/breach. Provided that a breach was alleged in the demand, the guarantor could not avoid paying by proving that the supplier had not in fact failed/committed a breach as alleged in the demand; see [1985] 2 Lloyd's Rep. at 549 col. 1 – 550. He also relied upon Gold Coast v. Caja de Ahorros supra, where the guarantors had irrevocably and unconditionally undertaken to pay upon the beneficiary buyer's "first written demand ... if and when the instalment becomes refundable from the Builder under and pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Shipbuilding Contract." The Court of Appeal, following Esal, held that the Builder's underlying liability was irrelevant to the guarantor's autonomous obligation to pay according to the demand made by the beneficiary. It explained that the reference to instalments becoming refundable under the Shipbuilding Contract did no more than identify the contractual events which triggered the right to call the refund guarantees. The Court of Appeal also expressly approved the statement in Jack, Malek and Quest, Documentary Credits (3rd Ed. 2001) that
"a (demand) guarantee will not be construed as payable only if a particular event has occurred, simply because the guarantee sets out, without more, the event or events following the happening of which it is intended that a demand may be made."
Conclusion