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 >> Geden Operations Ltd v Dry Bulk Handy Holdings Inc M/V "Bulk Uruguay" [2014] EWHC 885 (Comm) (28 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/885.html Cite as: [2014] 2 Lloyd's Rep 66, [2014] EWHC 885 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
7 Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
GEDEN OPERATIONS LTD |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
DRY BULK HANDY HOLDINGS INC M/V "BULK URUGUAY" |
Defendant |
____________________
Timothy Hill QC and Jeremy Lightfoot (instructed by Ince & Co) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 21 March 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Popplewell:
"Two sub-issues seemed to us to arise in the context of the alleged repudiation:-
(a) Did the Owners by their words or conduct evince an intention not to perform, or expressly declare that they would be unable to perform, their obligations under the Charterparty?
(b) If so, did such a refusal have the effect of substantially depriving the Charterers of the whole benefit which it was the intention of the parties that they should obtain from the contract?"
(1) The Owners' position relating to consent was bound to be dictated by the position taken by the head owners, and always would be. The answer to any request made to the head owners for permission to transit the GOA in the foreseeable future might well be no (Reasons para 157).
(2) The Owners' conduct amounted to no more than an assertion that the Charterers required their permission in order to transit the GOA. It did not involve a refusal to comply with an order to transit the GOA (Reasons para 160).
(3) It did not follow from the fact that Owners required the head owners' consent for any GOA transit that such consent would not be forthcoming at such time as the Charterers might have ordered the Vessel to transit the GOA, or that there would necessarily be some delay in complying with the Charterers' orders to do so if and when they were given (Reasons para 162). Had such an order been given, the Owners may well have been able to comply promptly with it (Reasons para 163). The Charterers' case at its highest was that it was possible that on some occasions consent might not have been forthcoming, although this conclusion was essentially speculative (Reasons para 168).
"That being so, we considered that the question was whether a reasonable person viewing the messages sent by the Owners over the whole of the relevant period, would conclude that the Owners had evinced an intention not to comply or not to comply promptly if at some time in the future during the three year period of the charter the Charterers gave orders to transit the GOA. We could not accept that any reasonable person would have reached the conclusion that the Owners had made that clear by 23rd July."
(1) The Vessel would have been traded initially in the Far East; the Charterers' evidence that they were seriously intending to take the Vessel through the GOA on her maiden voyage was rejected (Reasons para 178).
(2) Thereafter it is likely that the Vessel would have been traded in the Far East for the foreseeable future; alternatively if she had been repositioned to the Mediterranean on her maiden voyage, for which head owners had given GOA transit permission, she would have remained in the Atlantic for the foreseeable future and would not therefore have needed to transit the GOA southbound in the foreseeable future (Reasons para 200); the possibility that the Vessel might be unable to transit the GOA at some stage in the foreseeable future could not be regarded as having any significant effect on her earning capacity at the date of delivery (Reasons para 179). Although Mr Kimmins QC argued that the findings in paragraph 200 were addressed to a Golden Victory argument which allowed account to be taken of the intentions of the Charterers after the date of termination, the terms of paragraph 179 of the Reasons make clear that this was the majority's view of the Charterers' intention at the date of termination.
(3) Since the Charterers did not control their own cargoes, the effect of not being able freely to transit GOA in the longer term was to be measured by the competitive disadvantage to the Charterers in seeking potential sub-charterers as against vessels which could be marketed as GOA OK. In this respect the fact that the Vessel could not be marketed as GOA OK put her at something of a competitive disadvantage. This had to be seen against the ability to trade the Vessel elsewhere worldwide (Reasons para180).
(4) There was clear contemporaneous evidence, from the Charterers' renegotiation offers immediately after termination, that they regarded the GOA OK status to be worth no more than $1,250 per day (Reasons para181).
(5) In these circumstances "the evidence before us simply did not support a conclusion that the consequences of the Owners' refusal to allow the Vessel to transit the GOA freely deprived the Charterers of substantially the whole benefit of the contract" (Reasons para 176).
The First Question
"The law on the right to rescind is succinctly stated by Lord Porter in Heyman v. Darwins Ltd. as follows: "The three sets of circumstances giving rise to a discharge of contract are tabulated by Anson as: (1) renunciation by a party of his liabilities under it; (2) impossibility created by his own act; and (3) total or partial failure of performance. In the case of the first two, the renunciation may occur or impossibility be created either before or at the time for performance. In the case of the third, it can occur only at the time or during the course of performance."
The third of these is the ordinary case of actual breach, and the first two state the two modes of anticipatory breach. In order, that the arguments which I have heard from either side can be rightly considered, it is necessary that I should develop rather more fully what is meant by each of these two modes.
A renunciation can be made either by words or by conduct, provided it is clearly made. It is often put that the party renunciating must "evince an intention" not to go on with the contract. The intention can be evinced either by words or by conduct. The test of whether an intention is sufficiently evinced by conduct is whether the party renunciating has acted in such a way as to lead a reasonable person to the conclusion that he does not intend to fulfil his part of the contract. This application is fully discussed in Forslind v. Bechely-Crundall and forms the basis for the arbitrator's findings.
Of the two modes, renunciation has since the decision in Hochster v. De La Tour established itself as the favourite. The disadvantage of the other is that the party who elects to treat impossibility as an anticipatory breach may be running a serious risk. Suppose, for example, that a man promises to marry a woman on a future date, or to execute a lease, or to deliver goods; and that before the day arrives he marries another, or executes the lease in favour of another, or delivers the goods to a third party. The aggrieved party may sue at once. "One reason alleged in support of such an action," Campbell C.J. observed in Hochster v. De la Tour, "is, that the defendant has, before the day, rendered it impossible for him to perform the contract at the day: but this does not necessarily follow; for, prior to the day fixed for doing the act, the first wife may have died, a surrender of the lease executed might be obtained, and the defendant might have repurchased the goods so as to be in a situation to sell and deliver them to the plaintiff." But if the plaintiff treats the defendant's conduct as amounting to renunciation and justifies his rescission on that ground, the defendant could not avail himself of this defence.
…………
Since a man must be both ready and willing to perform, a profession by words or conduct of inability is by itself enough to constitute renunciation. But unwillingness and inability are often difficult to disentangle, and it is rarely necessary to make the attempt. Inability often lies at the root of unwillingness to perform. Willingness in this context does not mean cheerfulness; it means simply an intent to perform. To say: "I would like to but I cannot" negatives intent just as much as "I will not." In the earlier part of his argument Mr. Mocatta contended that a statement of inability without unwillingness did not amount to a renunciation, but in the end he abandoned the point. He concedes that the arbitrator's conclusion that the charterer evinced an intention not to perform is sufficiently supported by the finding that his attitude was that he was willing to perform if he could, but that he could not. In the other form of anticipatory breach, Mr. Mocatta, as will be seen, contends that the disablement must be deliberate and not negligent or accidental. But to the extent that inability enters into renunciation, Mr. Mocatta is not concerned with the character of the inability. If a man says "I cannot perform," he renounces his contract by that statement, and the cause of the inability is immaterial.
……….
"The two forms of anticipatory breach have a common characteristic that is essential to the concept, namely, that the injured party is allowed to anticipate an inevitable breach. If a man renounces his right to perform and is held to his renunciation, the breach will be legally inevitable; if a man puts it out of his power to perform, the breach will be inevitable in fact—or practically inevitable, for the law never requires absolute certainty and does not take account of bare possibilities. So anticipatory breach means simply that a party is in breach from the moment that his actual breach becomes inevitable. Since the reason for the rule is that a party is allowed to anticipate an inevitable event and is not obliged to wait until it happens, it must follow that the breach which he anticipates is of just the same character as the breach which would actually have occurred if he had waited. In Thorpe v. Fasey Wynn-Parry J. said: "In my judgment, when one considers these cases there is neither any good reason for a distinction nor, in my view, does there exist any distinction between the nature of the repudiation which is required to constitute an anticipatory breach and that which is required where the alleged breach occurs after the time for performance has arisen." If this is right, it seems to me to dispose in principle of Mr. Mocatta's submission that the disablement must be deliberate. If when the day comes for performance a party cannot perform, he is in breach, quite irrespective of how he became disabled. The inability which justifies the assumption of an anticipatory breach cannot be of any different character. Anticipatory breach was not devised as a whip to be used for the chastisement of deliberate contract-breakers, but from which the shiftless, the dilatory, or the unfortunate are to be spared. It is not confined to any particular class of breach, deliberate or blameworthy or otherwise; it covers all breaches that are bound to happen."
"In Short v Stone, 8 Q.B. 358, it was held that if a man promises to marry a woman on a future day, and before that day marries another woman, he is instantly liable to an action; in Ford v Tiley, 6 B. & C. 325, and Lovelock v Franklyn, 8 Q.B. 871, it was held that if a man contracts to grant a lease on and from a future day for a certain term, and before that day he grants a lease to another for the same term, he may be immediately sued; in Bowdell v Parsons, 10 East 359, it was held that if a man contracts to sell and deliver specific goods on a future day, and before that day he sells and delivers to another, he is immediately liable to the first purchaser. In each of the above cases it was not necessarily impossible for the defendant to perform the contract; for, prior to the day fixed, the first wife may have died, a surrender to the lease might have been obtained, and the defendant might have repurchased the goods; and in each case it seems better to say that the act of the defendant was tantamount to a refusal to perform his side of the contract which the plaintiff was entitled to accept as a breach in accordance with the principles above discussed; see Hochster v De la Tour, 2 E. & B., at p 688, per Lord Campbell; Synge v Synge, [1894] 1 QB 466; McIntyre v Belcher, 14 C. B. (N.S.) 654; Ogdens, Ltd v Nelson, [1905] AC 109.
………
A party is deemed to have incapacitated himself from performing his side of the contract, not only when he deliberately puts it out of his power to perform the contract, but also when by his own act or default circumstances arise which render him unable to perform his side of the contract or some essential part thereof."
The Second Question
"The arbitrators erred in law. They set out the right test for repudiatory breach but they cannot have applied it…A correct application of the test for repudiatory breach in these circumstances would lead inevitably to one answer only and this is part of the second stage of the reasoning to which Mustill J (as he then was) referred in The Chrysalis at page 507. Furthermore, even if they did apply the right test…their conclusion is one that no reasonable arbitrators could reach".