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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 >> ST Shipping And Transport Pte Ltd v Space Shipping Ltd [2017] EWHC 2808 (Comm) (10 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/2808.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2808 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
COMMERCIAL COURT (QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
AND IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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ST SHIPPING AND TRANSPORT PTE LTD |
CL-2017-000388 Claimant (Respondent in the arbitration) |
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- and - |
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SPACE SHIPPING LTD |
Defendant (Claimant in the arbitration) |
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And Between : |
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SPACE SHIPPING LTD |
CL-2017- 000390 Defendant (Claimant in the arbitration) |
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- and - |
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ST SHIPPING AND TRANSPORT PTE LTD |
Claimant (Respondent in the arbitration) |
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Mr Simon Croall QC and Mr Koye Akoni (instructed by Lax & Co LLP) for the Defendant in action 388
Hearing date: 7 November 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
Charterers' appeal: causation
The Arbitrator's Reasons
"28. …[the charterers'] difficulty on the facts, as I see the position, is that essentially nothing has changed since the first PFA… Most of the matters relied upon as justifying the charterers' case that it is the judges' ignoring of Venezuelan law that is causing the detention of CV Stealth were in existence at the time of the award, and nothing appears to have changed in that respect. This was not something that counsel for the charterers acknowledged or grappled with.
29. When one looks at the chain of causation set out in paragraph 72 of the first PFA which I held to be correct (paragraph 74) and the facts as found in that award, what has happened since in relation to the Venezuelan proceedings and the continuing detention of the Vessel is of a piece with what had occurred up to September 2015. As was said for the Owners in responding to a written submission from the Charterers after the hearing: "… the most that could be said about the evidence on Venezuelan law and its legal system is that it is irrelevant in the light of the charterers' failure to run or establish any case to the effect that there had been any change in Venezuela or its legal system since the time of the detention of the Vessel or, at any rate, the publication of the Conclusive Act. The net result is that there was nothing about Venezuelan law or its legal system which the charterers could pray in aid to break the chain of causation that had already been established as found in the tribunal's first award."
30. Even if it can be said that the extra delay since the first PFA, and perhaps some extra unusual behaviour on the part of the Venezuelan judges that can be discerned, are of any relevance, such factors are not sufficient to obliterate the original cause of the detention. Although they may be wrong as a matter of Venezuelan law, the judges' later decisions have been consistent with those that went before."
Analysis
(1) The question is whether the employment order was an effective cause of the continued detention; it need not be the cause, i.e. the sole cause; but an effective cause is more than a "but for" cause, which does no more than provide the occasion for some other factor unrelated to the charterers' order to operate: The Kos.
(2) Once an effective cause is operative, it will only be replaced by another intervening cause, so as to render the latter the sole effective cause, if the intervening act constitutes an event of such impact that it "obliterates the wrongdoing": Borealis v Geogas Trading [2011] 1 Lloyd's Rep 482 at [44].
(1) Where various factors or causes are concurrent, and one has to be selected as an effective cause, the matter is determined as one of fact: Leyland Shipping v Norwich Union [1918] A.C. 350 per Lord Shaw at 370, quoted with approval in The Kos at [42].
(2) Where the arbitrator has selected one cause in preference to another as the direct or proximate cause, that is a decision of fact: Royal Greek Government v Minister of Transport (The Ann Strathatos) (1949) 83 Lloyd's Rep 228 per Devlin J at 238, quoted with approval in The Kos at [68].
(3) However if an arbitrator has misdirected himself on a principle of law that is an error of law: see The Ann Strathatos at 238-239.
(4) If the arbitrator could not have reached the conclusion to which he came on the facts had he applied the correct principles of law, there must have been an error of law either in failing to identify the correct principles of law or in failing to apply them: Fulton Shipping Inc of Panama v Globalia Business Travel SAU [2014] 2 Lloyd's Rep 230 at [74] affirmed by the Supreme Court [2017] 1 WLR 2581 [2017] 2 Lloyd's Rep 177.
Disponent owners' appeal