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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 >> Sylvia Shipping Co Ltd v Progress Bulk Carriers Ltd [2010] EWHC 542 (Comm) (18 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/542.html Cite as: [2010] 2 Lloyd's Rep 81, [2010] 1 CLC 470, [2010] EWHC 542 (Comm) |
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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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SYLVIA SHIPPING CO LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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PROGRESS BULK CARRIERS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Chirag Karia (instructed by Marine Law) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 5th March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
Factual background
"7.17 We therefore find that the vessel's schedule was not sufficiently tight to have prevented the Owners from being able to have carried out maintenance of the steel work within the cargo holds.
7.18 WE THEREFORE FIND AND HOLD THAT THE OWNERS HAD NOT EXERCISED DUE DILIGENCE AND THAT THEY HAD BREACHED THEIR CONTRACTUAL MAINTENANCE OBLIGATIONS UNDER LINES 22-23 AND 37-38 OF THE CHARTER PARTY."
"8.11 In our opinion alarm bells should have been ringing loud and clear immediately after the Canadian PSC inspector issued the Form 5 on the 15th April. As there was a tick in the box for Class being required that should have been attended to immediately. Repairs needed could have/would have been identified while the vessel was at Port Alfred and probably have commenced at that port.
8.12 In the circumstances, we found that had the Owners taken positive and realistic action when the problems were formally identified at Port Alfred, the repairs would in all probability have been completed within the Conagra laycan. We also found that the Owners did not keep the charterers fully or properly informed as to what was really taking place and thereby denied them the opportunity to attempt to negotiate an extension of the laycan.
8.13 In conclusion, WE FIND AND HOLD THAT THE OWNERS ARE LIABLE TO THE CHARTERERS FOR DAMAGES ASSOCIATED WITH THE LOSS OF THE CHARTER WITH CONAGRA."
The law on remoteness
"… where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and reasonably be considered either arising naturally, i.e. according to the usual course of things, from such breach of contract itself, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of the breach of it. Now, if the special circumstances under which the contract was actually made were communicated by the claimants to the defendants and thus known to both parties, the damages resulting from the breach of such a contract, which they would reasonably contemplate, would be the amount of injury which would ordinarily follow from a breach of contract under this special circumstances so known and communicated. But, on the other hand, if these special circumstances were wholly unknown to the party breaking the contract, he, at the most, would only be supposed to have had in his contemplation the amount of injury which would arise generally, and in the great multitude of cases not affected by any special circumstances, from such a breach of contract."
"of a kind which the defendant, when he made the contract, ought to have realised was not unlikely to result from the breach … the words "not unlikely" … denoting a degree of probability considerably less than an even chance but nevertheless not very unusual and easily foreseeable."
The orthodox approach
"…one answer to our question, given as I understand it by my noble and learned friend, Lord Rodger of Earlsferry, is that these parties would not have had this particular type of loss within their contemplation. They would expect that the owner would be able to find a use for his ship even if it was returned late. It was only because of the unusual volatility of the market at that particular time that this particular loss was suffered. It is one thing to say, as did the majority arbitrators, that missing dates for a subsequent fixture was within the parties' contemplation as "not unlikely". It is another thing to say that the "extremely volatile" conditions which brought about this particular loss were "not unlikely".
The broader approach
"In any event the view of Lord Hoffmann and Lord Hope did not command a clear majority so as to make it into the ratio decidendi of The Achilleas. This can be said with confidence as the speech of the fifth member of the court, Lord Walker, is quite ambiguous on this issue. While some passages in his speech could be interpreted the one way and some the other, he concluded by saying that the appeal should be allowed not only for the reasons he had given but also for the further reasons given not only by Lord Hoffmann and Lord Hope but also by Lord Rodger. Indeed we should note that in delivering the Privy Council's judgment in Sentinel International Ltd v Cordes, a decision subsequent to The Achilleas, Lord Walker made the statement that "a contractual claim for damages for loss of a bargain is not of course subject to the SAAMCO principle. This would seem to put him firmly on the anti-SAAMCO side and to mean that the traditional approach of Lord Rodger, supported by Lady Hale, wins the day. Be this as it may, what is clear is that Lord Hoffmann and Lord Hope cannot on their own impose an entirely new idea upon the law of contract damages. Accordingly, it is only proper to proceed in what follows in the text on the basis that today the law of remoteness in contract damages remains as it has stood unchallenged for the century and a half since its first exposition in Hadley v Baxendale."
"17. . . . First, I do not consider that the House of Lords (at least the majority of their Lordships) were intending to lay down some completely new test as to recoverability of damages in contract and remoteness different from the so-called rule in Hadley v Baxendale (1854) 9 Exch 341 as refined in subsequent cases, above all the decision of the House of Lords itself in C Czarnikow Ltd v Koufos (The Heron II) [1967] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 457; [1969] 1 AC 350. See Lord Hope at paras 31 to 34, Lord Rodger at paras 47 to 52, Lord Walker at paras 66 to 78 and Baroness Hale at paras 89 to 93…
18… Lord Hoffmann acknowledges in paras 9 and 11 of his opinion that departure from the normal principles of foreseeability would be unusual. Although he refers to shipping as a market where limitations on the extent of liability arising out of general expectations in that market might be more common, I do not consider that he was intending to say that in all shipping cases (as opposed to the type of time charter case then under consideration) the rule in Hadley v Baxendale as subsequently refined, will no longer apply. If he was saying that, it was not a view shared by the majority and it would be heterodox to say the least."
"43. Hadley v Baxendale remains a standard rule but it has been rationalised on the basis that it reflects the expectation to be imputed to the parties in the ordinary case, ie that a contract breaker should ordinarily be liable to the other party for damage resulting from his breach if, but only if, at the time of making the contract a reasonable person in his shoes would have had damage of that kind in mind as not unlikely to result from a breach. However, South Australia and Transfield Shipping are authority that there may be cases where the court, on examining the contract and the commercial background, decides that the standard approach would not reflect the expectation or intention reasonably to be imputed to the parties".
"Contractual liability is of course based on express or implied agreement, and it is argued that the reason a party who has broken the contract should be held liable for losses that were not unusual, or which he had brought home to him might occur, is that (unless it is agreed otherwise) he can be taken to have agreed to compensate them. But it does not follow that liability for likely losses should be limited by a vague criterion such as "assumption of responsibility". Rather it is submitted that it is better to have a simple rule that the party in breach is be liable for all losses that are sufficiently likely to occur in the usual case, or whose likelihood has been brought home to him when the contract was made, unless he has validly excluded or restricted his liability. It has been cogently argued that there are limits to the extent that it is feasible to determine all issues by reference to an assumption of responsibility. In relation to the extent of liability for losses suffered by the innocent party as the result of a breach, there will seldom be any "factual foundation for making a determination as to whether the defendant implicitly assumed responsibility for the risk in question". It is thus to be hoped that the approach adopted by the majority in The Achilleas will be applied by the courts only in exceptional circumstances, such as those emphasised by Lord Hoffmann in that case."
Did the Tribunal err in law in concluding that the loss was not too remote?
The nature of the review on appeal
"My Lords, in Edwards v. Bairstow [1956] AC 14, 36, Lord Radcliffe made it plain that the court should only interfere with the conclusion of special commissioners if it were shown either that they had erred in law or that they had reached a conclusion on the facts which they had found which no reasonable person, applying the relevant law, could have reached. My Lords, when it is shown on the face of a reasoned award that the appointed tribunal has applied the right legal test, the court should in my view only interfere if on the facts found as applied to that right legal test, no reasonable person could have reached that conclusion. It ought not to interfere merely because the court thinks that upon those facts and applying that test, it would not or might not itself have reached the same conclusion, for to do that would be for the court to usurp what is the sole function of the tribunal of fact."
"The owners accepted that the burden of persuasion which they had to meet upon this mixed question of fact and law was a heavy one. (The Nema, [1981] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 239; [1982] A.C. 724) . The owners have to show that there must have been a failure by the arbitrators to apply the correct legal test by demonstrating that their conclusion was necessarily inconsistent with the application of that test."
The Tribunal's' conclusion on remoteness
"The Owner's maintained that:
"… it was completely unforeseeable to the Owners that a delay of a mere 7 days caused by alleged breaches on their part would give rise to such catastrophic consequences, such as the loss to the charterers,…. Which, in any event, we will be suggesting later in the submissions to have been grossly inflated… No other claim based e.g. on market rate for the period in question are asserted and it is now too late for such a claim to be advanced; yet as the House of Lords affirm in the "Achilleas", it is the market loss during the period of delay, which is the true measure of loss within the contemplation of parties to a charter party in such cases of breach.."
From this it is quite clear to us that the Owners were aware that a claim of this nature can arise, i.e. it was foreseeable being in the contemplation of the parties at the time of the contract, and it is just the quantum that is being disputed. The delay is a breach of the Charterparty resulting in off-hire in accordance with Clause 15 and Rider Clause 55 and for which damages flow naturally. We find this to be in accordance with the first limb of "Baxendale". We also find the damages associated with the lost fixture, being foreseeable, to be within the first limb of "Baxendale"."
"Where the owners are guilty of only a temporary failure to provide the charterers with the ship's services, ordinary rules of contractual damages apply to the assessment of the charterers' loss. The charterers are entitled to compensation to place them, as far as possible, in the position in which they would have been if there has been no breach of charter. The charterers can usually recover (so long as care is taken to avoid double-counting): (a) expenses thrown away during the period in which they are deprived of the ship's services; (b) loss of profits that they would have earned during the same period; and (c) any consequential loss of profits during the period following the ship's return to their service: The Derby [1984] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 635, per Hobhouse,J., at page 644 (the case went to the Court of Appeal but on other issues; [1985] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 325). So, for example, the charterers may be entitled to recover the profit that they would have made on a lost sub-fixture: see, for example, the same case at page 643."
"The arbitrator has found that if the vessel had not been delayed at Leixoes she would have proceeded to Antwerp and performed a voyage to Belawan carrying a cargo of sulphate of ammonia. This sub-charter would have lasted about 51 days starting from about June 4. It is estimated that it would have made a profit of some $54,000 for charterers, that is a profit rate of over $1000 per day.
At Leixoes the vessel was off-hire for the 21 days delay so no claim by charterers against owners for hire or bunkers costs thrown away arises. However, charterers were still entitled to claim for loss of profits and any consequential losses.
….
The charterers' correct claim was for the expenses thrown away during the 21 days, plus the loss of profits which would have been earned during this period, plus any consequential loss of profits they could prove to have been caused by the delay. If authority for this is required it can be found in "SNIA" Societa di Navigazione Industria E Commercio v. Suzuki & Co. and Teikoku Kisen Kaisha, (1924) 18 Ll.L.Rep. 333 , although that was a case of repudiation not mere delay. The first element, expenses thrown away during the 21 days, was substantially not suffered by the charterers because the vessel was off-hire. The next element, the lost profits during the 21 days, is included in the award of the lost profits on the Antwerp voyage. The last element is the balance of the profits of the Antwerp voyage, that is for the remaining 30 days out of the 51. The owners were apparently prepared to accept before the arbitrator that those profits had been fully lost. Prima facie they were; that sub-charter could not be performed because of the delay at Leixoes. If however it had been shown that those profits had not in part been lost then charterers would not have been entitled to recover them. This would be a simple matter of proof including, if necessary, causation."
"21.90 In these circumstances, the damages are normally calculated by making a comparison between the gross profit (namely freight, demurrage and other charges, less voyage expenses) which the owner would have derived from the broken charterparty, and the gross profit which he has earned under the substitute charter or charters, the latter being apportioned so as to reflect the amount earned up to the date when performance of the original charter would have been completed."
"Therefore, the charterers are taken to have had in contemplation, at the time when they entered into the addendum, the loss which would generally happen in the ordinary course of things if the vessel were delivered some nine days late so that the owners missed the cancelling date for a follow-on fixture. Obviously, that would include loss suffered as a result of the owners not having been paid under the contract for the charterers' use of the vessel for the period after midnight on 2 May. So, as both sides agree, the owners had to be compensated for that loss by the payment of damages. But the parties would also have contemplated that, if the owners lost a fixture, they would then be in a position to enter the market for a substitute fixture. Of course, in some cases, the available market rate would be lower and, in some cases, higher, than the rate under the lost fixture. But the parties would reasonably contemplate that, for the most part, the availability of the market would protect the owners if they lost a fixture. That I understand to be the thinking which lies behind the dicta to the effect that the appropriate measure of damages for late redelivery of a vessel is the difference between the charter rate and the market rate if the market rate is higher than the charter rate for the period between the final terminal date and redelivery:"
"…when they entered into the addendum in September 2003, neither party would reasonably have contemplated that an overrun of nine days would "in the ordinary course of things" cause the owners the kind of loss for which they claim damages. That loss was not the "ordinary consequence" of a breach of that kind. It occurred in this case only because of the extremely volatile market conditions which produced both the owners' initial (particularly lucrative) transaction, with a third party, and the subsequent pressure on the owners to accept a lower rate for that fixture. Back in September 2003, this loss could not have been reasonably foreseen as being likely to arise out of the delay in question. It was, accordingly, too remote to give rise to a claim for damages for breach of contract."
"34 In this case it was within the parties' contemplation that an injury which would arise generally from late delivery would be loss of use at the market rate, as compared with the charter rate, during the relevant period. This [is] something that everybody who deals in the market knows about and can be expected to take into account. But the charterers could not be expected to know how, if—as was not unlikely—there was a subsequent fixture, the owners would deal with any new charterers. This was something over which they had no control and, at the time of entering into the contract, was completely unpredictable. Nothing was known at that time about the terms on which any subsequent fixture might be entered into.."
Conclusion
Postscript
"…under subsection (2) appeals are only permitted "on any question of law arising out of an award ..," and "question of law" in subsection (4) has the same meaning. The emphasised words are crucial. The question of law must arise "out of [the] award," not out of the arbitration."