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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 >> ASM Shipping Ltd. of India v TTMI Ltd. of England [2007] EWHC 927 (Comm) (20 April 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2007/927.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 927 (Comm), [2007] ArbLR 6 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERICAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ASM SHIPPING LTD OF INDIA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TTMI LTD OF ENGLAND |
Defendant |
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Mr Simon Croall (instructed by Waterson Hicks) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 16th March 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
The freight award
The escrow account
The claim for a demurrage award
Discovery
Preliminary Issues
Section 68/69
(i) that Mr Matthews lacked the necessary independence to sit on the tribunal because he had been instructed by the Charterers' solicitors in an earlier arbitration in which serious allegations had been made against Mr Moustakas, a key witness for the Owners, in relation to the discovery of documents; and that his bias infected the original arbitrators;
(ii) that the Tribunal had refused an application to adjourn made just over a week before the scheduled start of the hearing; and
(iii) as to the allegedly excessive fees of the Tribunal.
The last ground was abandoned, and at the hearing it was made clear that no allegation of actual bias was pursued.
(a) the amount of the escrow account;
(b) £25,000 or its dollar equivalent, being the
amount of the security for the Owners' costs of the section 68/69 application, and
(c) £10,000 plus interest or its dollar equivalent,
being the amount that I had ordered the Owners to pay the Charterers in respect of the Charterers' security for costs application.
I also had before me on that occasion an application by the Charterers for a freezing order against the Owners in respect of the balance of the sums due under the freight award and any other assets of the Owners within the jurisdiction. I declined to make such an order.
The Court of Appeal
(i) the £50,000 costs ordered by Morison, J in respect of
the section 68/69 application;
(ii) the sum of £14,825.59 being the costs awarded to the
Charterers by the arbitrators in the September award;
(iii) the £10,000 ordered by me in respect of the Charterers
application for security for costs of the section 68/69 application
but adding back
(iv) the £10,800 costs awarded to the Owners in respect of the
unsuccessful application for a freezing order in December 2005.
The application to debar
Contumacy
The Owners' case
The Charterers' case
Further authorities
"Thus in Daniell's Chancery Practice 7th ed., vol.1, at p.725, the practice is stated as follows: "A party in contempt for non-obedience to an order in one cause will not be thereby prevented from making an application to the court in another cause relating to a distinct matter, although the parties to such other cause may be the same". And in Oswald on Contempt, 3rd ed., at p.248, this is said: "A plaintiff in one contempt may, it seems, proceed in other proceedings, even though they are between the same parties".
"while the general rules is that a Court will not hear an application for his own benefit by a person in contempt unless and until he has first purged his contempt, there is an established exception to that general rule where the purpose of the application is to appeal against, or have set aside, on whatever ground or grounds, the very order disobedience of which had put the person concerned in contempt".
Lord Justice Templeman did not dissent from Lord Justice Brandon's expression of general principle but thought that there was no absolute rule which entitled or disbarred a party in contempt from prosecuting an appeal against the order with which he has failed to comply.
"a strong thing for a court to refuse to hear a party to a cause and it is only to be justified by grave considerations of public policy. It is a step which a court will only take when the contempt itself impedes the course of justice and there is no other effective means of securing his compliance".
Debarring claims in the arbitration
"the same power of making orders in respect of:
(f) securing the amount in dispute in the reference;
(g) the detention, preservation or inspection of any property or thing which is the subject of the reference..
as it has for the purpose of and in relation to an action or matter in the High Court".
Note 1 It is as yet an undetermined issue in the main arbitration proceedings whether the Owners had been given notice before the fixture was concluded that the Charterers were chartering the vessel for Sempra Oil, or whether the agreement between Sempra Oil and TTMI had been disclosed during negotiation to the Owners. [Back] Note 2 The Charterers were in breach of the order to pay £ 10,800 costs made in December 2005. But that amount has been deducted by the Owners in calculating the amount of the order of 7th September. In those circumstances I decline to regard that non compliance as a sufficient foundation for debarment. In any event the application notice is based on failure to comply with the order of 7th September. [Back] Note 3 See, in particular, the passage from the witness statement of Mr Zaiwalla set out at paragraph 17 of my judgment of 23rd November 2005.
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