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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Laemthong International Lines Company Ltd v Abdullah Mohammed Fahem & Co [2005] EWCA Civ 519 (05 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/519.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 519 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION COMMERICAL COURT
The Hon Mr Justice Cooke
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
and
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
____________________
LAEMTHONG INTERNATIONAL LINES COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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ABDULLAH MOHAMMED FAHEM & CO |
Second Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr S Berry QC and Miss P Hopkins (instructed by Shaw & Croft) for the Appellant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Clarke:
Introduction
The facts
"In the event of the Original Bills of lading are not being available at discharge port on vessel's arrival, if so required by Charterers, Owners/Master to release the cargo to Receivers on receipt of Faxed letter of Indemnity. Such letter of Indemnity to be issued on Charterers head paper, wording in accordance with the usual P&I Club wording, and signed by Charterers only always without a bank counter-signature."
It is common ground that but for that clause the owners would not have been entitled or obliged to deliver the cargo otherwise than against original bills of lading.
"in view of the original Bs/L … have not been received, kindly issue your LOI to owners and have them urgently instruct Master/Ship's agents allowing vessel to commence discharge and deliver cargo for us without production original bills of lading. …"
The next document available to the court is an email from the charterers to the receivers dated 25 February attaching "a new text". As the judge held in paragraph 13 of his judgment, it appears that there had been some communication between the charterers and the receivers requiring the receivers to produce a letter of indemnity in respect of the cargo and presumably as some backup (as he put it) for any letter of indemnity that the charterers might themselves issue to the owners.
"In compliance with your request, we herewith return back to you the required LOI duly signed/stamped by us.
Kindly ensure to have Owners of the above vessel to instruct Master/ship's agent allowing vessel to commence discharge and deliver cargo to us without production original Bills of Lading in order avoid any delay berthing vessel.
Kindly confirm the attached LOI in a good readable order."
"Please note that we have been informed by the Receiver in Yemen that original bills of lading has not yet been received by his bank.
We check on our side with our bank who sent the documents. We do think that original documents will be next week with them.
In order not to waist [sic] any time as vessel is scheduled to arrive by tomorrow please find herewith our L.O.I. issued as per P&I wording as well as the L.O.I. signed by Receivers in order to start discharging upon vessel's arrival as Saturday and Sunday are working days in Yemen. So please instruct Master accordingly."
It will be noted that the charterers attached both their own LOI and the receivers' LOI to the fax.
The 1999 Act
"Right of third party to enforce contractual term.
1(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, a person who is not a party to a contract (a 'third party') may in his own right enforce a term of a contract if
(a) the contract expressly provides that he may; or
(b) subject to subsection (2), the term purports to confer a benefit on him.
(2) Subsection 1(b) does not apply if on a proper construction of the contract it appears that the parties did not intend the term to be enforceable by the third party.
(3) The third party must be expressly identified in the contract by name, as a member of a class or as answering a particular description but need not be in existence when the contract is entered into."
The receivers' LOI
"Load Port/disport Santos Brazil to Hodaida or Aden Port Republic of Yemen.
The above cargo was shipped on the above vessel by Cargill Agricola SA and USINA CAETA SA and consigned to Abdullah Mohammed Fahem & Co, PO Box 3637 Hodaida Republic of Yemen for delivery at the port of Hodaida or Aden Port Republic of Yemen. But the bills of lading have not yet arrived. We hereby request you to deliver the said cargo to Abdullah Fahem PO Box 3637 Hodaida Republic of Yemen at Aden without production of the original bills of lading.
In consideration of your complying with our above request we hereby agree as follows:
1) To indemnify you, your servants and agents and to hold all of you harmless in respect of any liability, loss, damage or expense of whatsoever nature which you may sustain by reason of delivering the cargo in accordance with our request.
2) In the event of any proceedings being commenced against you, or any of your servants or agents, in connection with delivery of the cargo as aforesaid to provide you or them on demand with sufficient funds to defend.
3) If in connection with delivery of the cargo as aforesaid the ship or any other ship or property in the same or associated Ownership management or control should be arrested or detained or should the arrest or detention thereof be threatened or should there be any interference in the use or trading of the vessel (whether by virtue of … being altered on the ship's registry or otherwise howsoever) to provide on demand such bail or other security as may be required to prevent such arrest or detention or to secure the release of the ship or property, or to remove such interference and to indemnify you in respect of any liability, loss, damage or expense caused by such arrest or detention or threatened arrest or detention or such interference whether or not such arrest or detention or threatened arrest or detention or interference may be justified.
4) If the place at which we have asked you to make delivery is a bulk liquid or gas terminal, facility or another ship, lighter or barge then delivery to such terminal, facility, ship, lighter or barge shall be deemed to be delivery to the party to whom we have requested you to make such delivery.
5) As soon as all original bills of lading for the above cargo shall have come into our possession to deliver same to you or otherwise to cause all original bills of lading to be delivered to you whereupon all liabilities hereunder shall cease.
6) The liability of each and every person under this indemnity shall be joint and several and shall not be conditional upon your proceeding first against any person whether or not such person is party to or liable under this indemnity.
7) This indemnity shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law and each and every person liable under this indemnity shall at your request submit to the jurisdiction of the High Court of Justice in England."
The first issue
"Nonetheless, for the purpose of delivering the cargo it is plainly right to say that the owners acted as the charterers' agents, and the owners must be the primary party who is intended to be covered by the expression "your agents". Others might also be involved, perhaps stevedores or port agents or something of that kind, should they be the agents of the charterers in fact, but as matters arise, and subject to what I am about to say, it is clear that the primary party to whom this clause was intended to refer as agents must be the owners."
We agree. There is moreover nothing in the remainder of the judgment to lead to any different conclusion.
"Agency is the fiduciary relationship which exists between two persons, one of who expressly or impliedly consents that the other should act on their behalf so as to affect his relations with third parties, and the other of whom similarly consents so to act or so acts" (emphasis added).
"The charterers could not themselves deliver the cargo except by making use of the shipowners to do so".
Accordingly, as he went on to say in paragraph 29:
"The only way in which the charterers could sustain liability for a misdelivery of the cargo would be on the basis that they had misdelivered the cargo through the agency of the owners".
As we see it, that has two consequences (to which we have already referred in paragraph 28 above) for the purposes of this first contention. First, it reinforces the point that the parties envisaged the charterers delivering through the agency of the owners. Secondly, it indicates that the only way in which the charterers could become liable would be on the basis that they were treated as responsible for the acts of the owners in effecting the delivery, which reinforces the contention that the parties to the receivers' LOI envisaged that the owners would be treated as the agents of the charterers.
"41. It was suggested that Clause 3 might fall into a different category. Clause 3 makes provision for two different types of obligation. First the provision of bail, or surety, or security, in order to release the ship; and secondly, for an indemnity to the addressee. The context of the clause is, however, "the ship and any other ship in the same or associated ownership", so that attention is immediately directed to the Owners of the ship who, as already mentioned, are the party with the primary liability to deliver and against whom proceedings would normally be taken under Clause 2.
42. Although there is no reference to "servants or agents" in Clause 3, the clause plainly purports to confer a benefit, namely the release of the vessel, which is primarily a benefit to the Owners and only secondarily a benefit to the Charterers in respect of any liability which they may have to the Owners. The wording of the indemnity in Clause 3 must, in my judgment, be taken to be commensurate with that in Clause 1. And although there is no express reference to "servants or agents", it is plain that the indemnity must operate in the same way, and so the difference in wording adds nothing to the arguments advanced by Charterers.
43. Because the letter of indemnity is not framed in terms of indemnifying the Charterers against their liability to the Owners under the Charterers' letter of indemnity (although it would benefit Charterers if the Receivers secured the release of the vessel in as much as it would relieve them of their responsibility to do so under their letter of indemnity) what the clause requires is bail or other security which would satisfy the third party claims against the vessel (here, the bank's claims) so that the Owners' vessel would be free to go.
44. Clause 3 not only has to be read in the context of the letter of indemnity as a whole, which is to benefit the Owners or their agents, but also on its own terms it purports to confer benefit both on Charterers and Owners."
We entirely agree with the conclusions and reasoning of the judge in those paragraphs.
i) that the judge was right in holding that the terms of the receivers' LOI relied upon by the owners purport to confer a benefit upon the owners within the meaning of section 1(1)(b) of the 1999 Act, essentially for the reasons he gave;ii) that Mr Berry's you point, while it has some linguistic attraction, cannot be accepted if the words used are construed in the context of the LOI as a whole and if the LOI is in turn viewed against its surrounding circumstances or factual matrix;
iii) that it follows that the owners are and were entitled to enforce clauses 1 and 3 of the LOI in their own name unless, on a proper construction of the contract it appears that the parties did not intend the term to be enforceable by them, which is the second issue in this appeal; and
iv) that it also follows that it is not necessary to examine whether the owners' alternative case on agency is correct, which in turn means that it is not necessary to consider whether or not the charterers were paid for the sugar or whether the fresh evidence should be admitted. We will not therefore do so but turn to the second issue.
The second issue
"But to allay the fears of the construction industry we should clarify that, even if there is no express contracting out of our proposed reform, we do not see our second limb [ie what became section 1(2)] as cutting across the chain of sub-contracts that have traditionally been a feature of that industry. For example, we do not think that in normal circumstances an owner would be able to sue a sub-contractor for breach of the latter's contract with the head-contractor. This is because, even if the sub-contractor has promised to confer a benefit on the expressly designated owner, the parties have deliberately set up a chain of contracts which are well understood in the construction industry as ensuring that a party's remedies lie against the other contracting party only. In other words, for breach of the promisor's obligation, the owners' remedies lie against the head-contractor who in turn has the right to sue the sub-contractor. On the assumption that that deliberately created chain of liability continues to thrive subsequent to our reform, our reform would not cut across it because on a proper construction of the contract - construed in the light of the surrounding circumstances (that is, the existence of the connected head-contract and the background practice and understanding of the construction industry) - the contracting parties (for example, the sub-contractor and the head-contractor) did not intend the third party to have the right of enforceability. Rather the third party's rights of enforcement in relation to the promised benefit were intended to lie against the head-contractor only and not against the promisor. For similar reasons we consider that the second limb of our test would not normally give a purchaser of goods from a retailer a right to sue the manufacturer (rather than the retailer) for breach of contract as regards the quality of the goods."
"Those situations are well-known and provide a commercial background of practice to contracts which are unlikely to cut across the legal framework customarily employed. Here there is no such background. Letters of indemnity take a number of different forms and have given rise to a wealth of arguments between parties as to their terms. Each has to be construed according to its own terms."
CONCLUSION