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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 >> Associated British Ports v Ferryways NV & Anor [2008] EWHC 1265 (Comm) (13 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/1265.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1265 (Comm), [2008] 2 Lloyd's Rep 353 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Associated British Ports (a company created by statute) |
Claimant |
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Ferryways NV (2) MSC Belgium N.V. |
Defendants |
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Christopher Smith (instructed by Stephenson Harwood) for the First Defendant
Peter Irvin and Victoria Wakefield (instructed by Constant & Constant) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 26, 27 February, 3, 4, 5, 6 March 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Field:
Introduction
The First Agreement
The following charges have been agreed:-
a) Handling charges, excluding lashing.
i) For the first 12 months of the service
£ per trailer First 30,000 units 20.00 30,001-50,000 units 21.00 50,001-70,000 units 22.50 70,001-82,500 units 24.00 82,500 +units 25.00
ii) Years 2 – 5
First 50,000 units 25.00 50,001+ units 22.50
NB - These rates will be subject to annual increases in line with RPI from the commencement of year 2 to the commencement of year 5.
(Empty slave trailers (vessel's equipment) at 50% of above rates ….).
The First Minimum Throughput Obligation
This confirms that (always provided Ferryways NV continues to operate, regardless of ownership, and that Associated British Ports Ipswich continues to supply the required and agreed service levels) …. Ferryways NV will guarantee an annual throughput of 25,000 units through Ipswich from 7th February, 2001, until 6th February, 2005.
The Second Agreement
The Empty Trailer Rate
Charges
Handling Charges Ostend Service £26.66 per Unit for first 50,000 Units Trailers £23.99 per Unit thereafter Other Services £23.99 per Unit for all Units Trailers Containers and swap bodies Receiving and Re-delivery £13.33 per unit Empty Trailers 50% of trailer rate Cars/Tractors £16.00 each
The Second Minimum Throughput Obligation
If after the end of a Year the total number of Units discharged from and loaded to Services at the Port pursuant to this Agreement is less than the Minimum Throughput for the relevant Year then ABP will be entitled to be paid by Ferryways a sum equal to the amount ABP would have received had the Minimum Throughput been met provided that if the shortfall is less than 10% of the Minimum Throughput for the relevant Year no invoice will be issued therefor and the Minimum Throughput for the following Year will be increased by the amount of such shortfall and provided further that any shortfall which has been carried forward from a previous Year shall be disregarded when calculating whether a shortfall in any Year is less than 10% of the Minimum Throughput.
25,000 Units per Year from the date of this Agreement to 31 December 2004
110,000 Units per Year from 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2007; and
120,000 Units per Year from 1st January 2008 and thereafter
(i) a trailer loaded or empty (accompanied or unaccompanied) or a freight container or swap body up to 13.6 metres long or to any replacement standard length
(ii) such other parcel or unit of goods as the parties agree from time to time
provided that two 6 metre containers carried on a single chassis will be classified as a single Unit;
The Letter Agreement
Dear Sirs,
We hereby confirm that Ferryways NV ("the Company") is a member of the same group of companies as MSC Belgium NV.
In consideration of Associated British Ports ("ABP") entering into an agreement relating to the Port of Ipswich of even date with this letter (the "Agreement"), we assume full responsibility for ensuring (and shall so ensure) that, for seven years from the date of this letter, the Company (i) has and will at all times have sufficient funds and other resources to fulfil and meet all duties, commitments and liabilities entered into and/or incurred by reason of the Agreement as and when they fall due and (ii) promptly fulfils and meets all such duties commitments and liabilities.
We are aware that ABP will rely on this letter in deciding whether to enter into the Agreement with the Company.
The construction validity and performance of this letter shall be governed by English law, and we submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the High Court in London in connection with any disputes arising out of this letter.
Ferryways claims that it has been overcharged for customers' trailers
The August 2004 Concession Agreement
Ferryways claims that empty slave trailers are "Units"
The February 2006 Time to Pay Agreement
Supplementary memorandum to the above agreement.
In accordance with Clause 6.6 of the above agreement it is necessary to record that the payment due under Clause 4.3 for the agreement year end 31st December 2005, now agreed as £324,414.27 is to be paid as per the payment schedule below.
Already paid £34,822.45.
Balance to be paid in 18 weekly instalments from week commencing 27th February 2006 to week commencing 26th June 2006 inclusive of £16,032.88 plus a final payment of £2,383.01 as a "schedule payment supplement".
In the event of any future agreed adjustment to the payment due under Clause 4.3, a new supplementary memorandum to the above agreement will be made, which will supercede (sic) this supplementary memorandum.
The payment aforementioned amount does not constitute an acceptance by either party of the respective interpretations of the agreement dated 1st September 2003 such as, but not limited to, those reflected in recent exchanges.
Ferryways ceases trading
Ferryways is acquired by a competitor -- the Cobelfret Group
ABP's claims in summary
The issues to be decided
(1) Are empty slave trailers, and/or cars and/or tractors, "Units" for the purposes of clause 4.3 and if they are: (a) is clause 4.3 void by reason of being a penalty or because it is too uncertain to be enforced; and (b) (alternatively) is the shortfall to be calculated by reference to an average of the rates applicable to all of the items that fall within the definition of a "Unit"?
(2) What sums are recoverable for breach of clause 4.3 for the period 1st January 2007 to the end of the term of the SA (31st December 2024)? In particular, can ABP recover the gross sums that would have been due under clause 4.3 if the SA had continued, less a discount for early payment, or must ABP also give credit for the expenses saved from not providing port services to Ferryways and for any substitute business it has procured and/or could reasonably be expected to procure over the period in question?
(3) Are such sums as are due from Ferryways recoverable from MSCB under the letter agreement, or does that agreement contain guarantees that have been rendered unenforceable by reason of the August 2004 Concession Agreement and/or the February 2006 Time to Pay Agreement?
The position of Ferryways at trial
The first issue
Are empty slave trailers, and/or cars and/or tractors "Units" for the purposes of clause 4.3 and if they are: (a) is clause 4.3 void by reason of being a penalty or because it is too uncertain to be enforced; and (b) (alternatively) is the shortfall to be calculated by reference to an average of the rates applicable to all of the items that fall within the definition of a "Unit"?
The second issue
What sums are recoverable for breach of clause 4.3 for the period 1st January 2007 to the end of the term of the SA (31 December 2024)? In particular, can ABP recover the gross sums that would have been due under clause 4.3 if the SA had continued, less a discount for early payment, or must ABP also give credit for the expenses saved from not providing port services to Ferryways and for any substitute business it has procured and/or could reasonably be expected to procure over the period in question?
The third issue
Are such sums as are due from Ferryways recoverable from MSCB under the letter agreement, or does that agreement contain guarantees that have been rendered unenforceable by reason of the August 2004 Concession Agreement and/or the February 2006 Time to Pay Agreement?
Guarantee or Indemnity?
There the test given is, whether the defendant is interested in the transaction, either by being the person who is to negotiate it or in some other way, or whether he is totally unconnected with it. If he is totally unconnected with it, except by means of his promise to pay the loss, the contract is a guarantee; if he is not totally unconnected with the transaction, but is to derive some benefit from it, the contract is one of indemnity, not a guarantee, and section 4 does not apply.
Both in the judgment of Cockburn CJ in Fitzgerald v Dressler and in the judgment of Lord Esher MR in Sutton v Grey, the word "interest" means some species of interest which the law recognises. In the present case the defendant had no such interest in the property which was about to be seized by the sheriff. He was a director of the syndicate who had, no doubt, a deep interest, in the popular sense of the word, in its proceedings. He held a large number of shares: I believe he was the largest shareholder in the syndicate. He had also financed the syndicate, but he had nothing in the nature of a charge on their property; he was at the utmost a general creditor of the syndicate.
It has been contended that we ought to read the words "interest in the transaction" in a wide sense, and importing a "business interest" in the syndicate – that kind of interest which a creditor and a shareholder of a company has in its prospects. To do this would, I think, go a long way to repeal s.4 of the Statute of Frauds, and to extend the doctrine of Couturier v Hastie very much further than I am prepared to extend it.
It is suggested that the true definition of cases which do not come within s.4 should be not those in which the obligation to pay the debt of another is an incident of a larger contract, but those in which the main object is to secure the promisor's own personal interest. But, I think, if such a definition were adopted, there would be nothing left to come within s.4 because in every case there must be a consideration for which the promisor bargains to come to him from the promisee…. If the contract is that the promisor will be answerable for the debt due to the promisee if he will forbear, if the main object is that forbearance, and the promisor wishes to obtain it, that would be sufficient to take the case out of the statute. In my opinion so to hold would be simply to repeal s.4
Whether Lord Esher MR was right …. and what he meant by "interest in the transaction," I do not think it necessary to inquire, for these expressions, and those used by Stirling LJ in Harburg India Rubber Comb Co v. Martin, appear to me to have relation to a class of cases which in my opinion, have no relevance to a case like the present, where the facts merely are that a man who has a considerable interest in and holds a debenture of a company, and therefore, no doubt, desires that goods should continue to be supplied to it, gives a guarantee for payment of the price of goods supplied to it, in the event of default of payment thereof by the company …. It seems to me illogical to say that, where you have a contract which according to the terms of the statute must be in writing, the application of the statute can be affected by the circumstance that one of the parties is induced to make the contract by the fact that he is interested in that which is the consideration for it.
He did not, however, give the guarantee in performance of an obligation under any antecedent contract, or of any obligation or liability under which he lay, independently of the particular promise which constituted the guarantee. His motive – I deliberately use the word "motive" and not "object" – in giving the guarantee was that he thought that it would be to his advantage that the business of the company should continue to be carried on. I do not think that, in any sense in which the word "interest" has been used in any of the prior cases on the subject, the plaintiff here had any such interest as would make it true to say that he gave the guarantee by reason of any liability or obligation which existed independently of the guarantee or that he was contracting for the protection of any right.
In short, it appears that the court in Harburg was saying that Lord Esher's formulation should not be taken literally. Not every interest in the transaction would serve to take the promise out of the statute; there had to be more than a motive for offering the promise; there had to be a real interest in the subject matter of the contract. If the promisor had no real interest in the subject matter of the contract but only a motive for offering his promise, the promise would be a contract of guarantee. On the facts of Harburg, the defendant promisor had 'an interest' in the contract or transaction between the syndicate and the plaintiff in that he wanted the plaintiff to forbear to execute judgment against the syndicate. That was his motive for offering his promise. However, his promise was not an incident to the main contract or transaction and he did not have the kind of legal interest in the subject matter of the main contract which would make his promise an indemnity. (Para 32)
The effect on the guarantees of the August 2004 Concession Agreement
It is a well established and strictly applied principle that any variation in the terms of the agreement between the creditor and the debtor which could prejudice the surety will, unless he consents thereto, discharge him from liability, unless the contract of suretyship provides to the contrary. It is immaterial that the variation has not in fact prejudiced the surety, or that the likelihood that it may do so is remote. If the variation could prejudice the surety it alters the nature of the risk which he has undertaken and he is entitled to decide whether he wishes to continue to be bound or not …. The principle is applied very strictly so that even the most trifling variation may discharge the surety.
The effect on the guarantees of the February 2005 Time to Pay Agreement
It has been established for a very long time, beginning with Rees v Berrington to the present day, without a single case going to the contrary, that on the principles of equity a surety is discharged when the creditor, without his assent, gives time to the principal debtor, because by so doing he deprives the surety of part of the right he would have had from the mere fact of entering into the suretyship, namely, to use the name of the creditor to sue the principal debtor, and if this right is suspended for a day or an hour, not injuring the surety to the value of one farthing, and even positively benefiting him, nevertheless, by the principles of equity, it is established that this discharges the surety altogether.
Conclusion
Note 1 The parties hope to be able to agree these sums, failing which there will have to be a separate quantum hearing. [Back]
Submissions on behalf of Ferryways N. V.
Action No: 2006 Folio 1049 IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN’S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B E T W E E N :-
ASSOCIATED BRITISH PORTS (a company created under statute)
Claimant
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(1) FERRYWAYS N.V.
(in bankruptcy) (2) MSC BELGIUM N.V.
Defendants
SUBMISSIONS
on behalf of FERRYWAYS N.V
These submissions are served in compliance with the directions given by e-mail on 6 June 2008 (as amended). They contain Ferryways’ submissions on the following matters which are consequential upon the Court’s Judgment:-
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Submissions on behalf of Ferryways N. V.
(a) permission to appeal;
(b) costs;
(c) amount due;
(d) directions.
Permission to Appeal
2. The Court has ruled against Ferryways on the meaning of Unit. This involved two sub-issues:-
(a) are empty slave trailers within the definition of Unit for the purposes of clause 4.3?
(b) are cars/tractors within the definition of Unit for the purposes of clause 4.3?
3. Ferryways does not seek permission to appeal in respect of either sub-issue. Costs
4. Ferryways submits that the costs of the claim against MSC (which will include most of the costs of the trial) should be dealt with separately from the costs of the claim against Ferryways. There would be no justification for Ferryways being ordered to bear any part of the costs of the claim against MSC, and it is assumed that neither ABP nor MSC will suggest otherwise.
5. So far as the costs of the claim against it are concerned, Ferrryways’ position is as
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Submissions on behalf of Ferryways N. V.
follows:-
(a) Ferryways accepts that it must bear the pre trial costs of the action (as between ABP and Ferryways), to be assessed if not agreed;
(b) so far as the costs of the trial are concerned, there were (in the end) only two issues between ABP and Ferryways. Ferryways lost in relation to the definition of Unit (issue 1 referred to at paragraph 41 of the Judgment) but won in relation to the quantification of damages (issue 2);
(c) the issues relating to the quantification of damages were of greater significance in financial terms, and occupied significantly more time at the trial;
(d) Ferryways therefore submits that the appropriate order would be that each party should bear its own costs of the trial itself (as between ABP and Ferryways). This would properly reflect the fact that Ferryways has won on the most significant issue, but that ABP has obtained a judgment for a substantial sum.
Amount Due
6. ABP has pleaded its case in relation to the shortfall for 2005 and 2006 by reference to
the February 2005 Time to Pay Agreement and on the assumption that it was correct to carry forward 10% of the 2005 shortfall. It is now common ground that that assumption was wrong. Since the trial ABP has provided a calculation of the sums it says are due without the 10% carry forward. For the purposes of this litigation Ferryways would be content to agree that the sums due to ABP are as follows:-
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Submissions on behalf of Ferryways N. V.
(a) unpaid handling charges £1,155,798.54
(b) historic unpaid invoices £4,107.01
(c) statutory dues and other undisputed invoices £91,572.33
(d) 2005 shortfall £389,882.73
(e) 2006 shortfall £679,461.75 total £2,320,822.36
7. On the basis of the Court’s Judgment there is no need for MSC to agree these figures. But (in case ABP succeeds on any appeal) it would clearly be preferable if MSC also agreed the relevant figures - to avoid any risk that MSC later sought to argue for lower amounts. MSC has been invited to agree the figures but so far has not done so -although it has not suggested any reason why the figures might be incorrect.
8. It is hoped that MSC will agree the above figures (or identify its reason for disagreeing with any of the figures). Subject to MSC raising any points which suggest that the figures are wrong, Ferryways accepts that ABP is entitled to judgment for the amount set out above, plus interest.
9. Ferryways has invited ABP to set out what interest it claims, and it is hoped that the parties will be able to agree what interest is due before any order is drawn up. If not Ferryways submits that the Court should order that interest be assessed if not (subsequently) agreed. That assessment can, it is submitted, take place at the same time as the assessment of the remaining claim for damages.
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Submissions on behalf of Ferryways N. V.
10. ABP has previously indicated that it would seek an order for a payment on account of
the damages due in respect of the period 2007 onwards. As set out in its earlier submissions, Ferryways does not, as such, object to an order for payment of an interim amount. ABP has, however, already obtained judgment from Teare J. in relation to Immingham, for £1,487,699.69 and a further £1,000,000 on account of damages to be assessed. It will now obtain judgment £2,320,822.36 plus interest in this action. ABP is an unsecured creditor in the liquidation. There may, in all the circumstances, be little (or nothing) to be gained from an order for payment of an interim sum in respect of the future losses.
Directions
11. As between ABP and Ferryways there will have to be a trial of the quantum issues arising out of paragraphs 53 - 56 of the Judgment. So far ABP has pleaded its case in relation to quantum only in a very generalised manner (paragraphs 40A, 40B and 40C of the Re-Amended Particulars of Claim) and given very limited disclosure, and Ferryways has not responded at all save to rely upon ABP’s obligation to mitigate such loss as it may have suffered (paragraph 91(c) of the Amended Defence).
12. Ferryways submits that it would be appropriate for the Court to order the (sequential) exchange of statements of case and the disclosure (by ABP) of relevant documents with a CMC to be fixed thereafter if the parties are unable to agree a figure. It would be most appropriate for ABP to give disclosure at the same time as serving its statement of case. Ferryways invites ABP to suggest a realistic timetable within which
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Submissions on behalf of Ferryways N. V.
it can do so. The timetable thereafter will (or at least may) depend on whether ABP
seeks (and obtains) permission to appeal (because there would be little point in proceeding beyond service of ABP’s statement of case and disclosure until it is known whether or not MSC has any interest in the remaining quantum issues).
13. As referred to above, ABP has obtained an order for damages to be assessed in relation to the claim relating to Immingham. It is likely (but impossible to say until statements of case have been exchanged) that broadly similar issues will arise. In the circumstances it may be appropriate for the two assessments to be heard together. Ferryways does not seek such an order at this stage but submits that it is an issue that can and should be determined at the CMC stage.
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Essex Court Chambers, Christopher Smith
24, Lincoln’s Inn Fields.
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