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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 >> Andrew Weir Shipping Ltd v Wartsila UK Ltd & Anor [2004] EWHC 1284 (Comm) (11 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2004/1284.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 1284 (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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ANDREW WEIR SHIPPING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WARTSILA UK LIMITED & ANOR. |
Defendants |
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Mr Richard King and Ms Angela Hall (instructed by Messrs Rawlinson Butler, Solicitors, Crawley, West Sussex) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 25th and 26th May 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cooke :
Introduction
The Undisputed Facts
i) AWSL has an existing and long-standing relationship with WUK as a distributor and supplier of spare parts for a variety of engines (including but not limited to Wartsila 46's). WUK has also supplied engineers, who have provided services and participated in work on engines fitted to AWSL vessels.ii) The local Wartsila companies (here WUK) support the operations of the Wartsila Group in their respective countries, and WUK is the local company in the UK.
iii) WUK is responsible for servicing Wartsila engines sold by the relevant factory to WUK's customers including AWSL, on request, as evidenced by the WFI document entitled "WFI Responsibility List/Engines and Installations".
iv) Generally WUK's business concerns the supply of spare parts to WUK's customers and the provision of servicing to such customers including AWSL, on request. In carrying out the latter function, WUK's service engineers will endeavour to use their skill, experience and training.
v) In terms of after sales service, the system has been for engines sold to be part of the responsibility of the local network company and WUK has aimed to liaise directly with UK customers for the servicing of the engines and the supply of spare parts, in particular since 1998.
vi) Each local service network company (here WUK) has specially appointed fully dedicated contact people to handle technical inquiries.
vii) In 1997 WUK started a "Key Account Manager" system where each customer was assigned to a manager within WUK. The Key Account Manager requested that all orders be placed through WUK. In practice AWSL had always ordered 95% of its spares requirements through WUK.
viii) WUK knew which of its customers had Wartsila 46 engines including AWSL.
ix) The local network service company (here WUK) sent any bulletins or service letters prepared by a Wartsila factory to its (WUK's) customers and all technical bulletins and service letters were also copied to WUK's service department for the attention of the WUK Service Superintendent and WUK's service engineers. Furthermore WUK issued directly technical information that was within the guidelines of the product factories. (WUK maintain that all design issues are matters for WFI alone).
x) Such bulletins and service letters commonly contained statements such as "for more details and for supply of packages please contact your local Wartsila Service Station" (ie in the present case WUK).
xi) The Operation & Maintenance Support section of the Wartsila 46 engine spare parts catalogue includes guidance notes on the "Structure and usage of the Spare Part Catalogue", it being stated, "About prospective modifications and changes in the specifications the customer will get the information through Spare part notices, Service letters and After Sales Information if needed".
xii) Between the beginning of 1998 and 5th August 2001, 14 technical documents were provided by WUK to AWSL consisting of 1 maintenance instruction, 6 service letters, 3 technical bulletins, 1 data and specification document, 1 operating instruction document and 2 spare parts notices. (These documents were, according to WUK all documents into which they had no input and which were produced entirely by WFI).
xiii) WDSL received, and would have sent to all applicable Wartsila 32 customers based in the UK, the Technical Bulletin dated 1st August 1995 (The 1995 Warning Bulletin) entitled, "Safety aspects on and maintenance of fuel supply system of VASA 32" (the Wartsila 32 Engine). WUK admits that from January 1997 it must be taken as having known matters set out in the 1995 Warning Bulletin, and specifically admits that it must be taken to have known that:
a) serious fuel leakage had occurred in the low pressure fuel supply system of Wartsila 32 engines and that a few such leakages had led to a fire;b) experience of use of a copper washer with the erosion plugs on the fuel injection pumps used on Wartsila 32 engines indicated that it was preferable to use a steel washer;c) the recommended tightening torque of erosion plugs was increased to 250 NM for L'Orange fuel injection pumps used on the Wartsila 32 engines.(The existence of any link between a. b. and c. however is very much in issue).
xiv) WUK did not send the 1995 Warning Bulletin to AWSL.
xv) WUK received, and would have sent to all applicable Wartsila 32 customers based in the UK, the Technical Bulletin dated 17th August 1999 entitled, "Safety and Maintenance of the Fuel Supply System of Wartsila 32 Engines" (the 1999 Warning Bulletin) which contained similar information to the 1995 Warning Bulletin.
xvi) WUK did not send the 1999 Warning Bulletin to AWSL or otherwise warn AWSL, notwithstanding that a fuel pump fire occurred on a Wartsila 46 engine at a power plant in India in May 2001.
xvii) The increased torque setting of 350 NM for Wartsila 46 fuel pump erosion plugs (from 200 NM) was introduced in or before October 1995. Neither AWSL nor any Wartsila 46 engine owner was told of this increase in torque (or that a steel washer would need to be used). (WUK's case is that it did not know of this increase until after the fire on the Baltic Eider).
xviii) WUK is the distributor of OEM (original manufacture) spare parts to the customers for whom it is responsible including AWSL.
xix) WUK have supplied spare parts to AWSL, passed on technical documentation to AWSL and participated in servicing jobs for AWSL on the Baltic Eider from time to time.
xx) AWSL used WUK service engineers to attend the fire repairs as it had done at the time of the 1999 dry docking after AWSL complained as to the limited knowledge of the local Wartsila service engineer.
xxi) The value of parts purchased by AWSL from WUK is substantial. On orders between 1st January 1997 and 25th June 2002, AWSL paid WUK the sum of £1,396,442.96 for spare parts.
xxii) Part of the role of the local network company is to arrange for the supply of spare parts kits for attending service engineers.
xxiii) WUK had supplied the spare parts kits for the fuel pumps as follows:
Date of Purchase Number of Sets Wartsila UK Office(1) 24th February 1998 6 Glasgow
(2) 19th March 1999 6 Southampton
(3) 15th July 1999 6 Sevenoaks
(4) 15th December 1999 4 Glasgow
(5) 13th September 2000 4 Glasgow
xxiv) The Wartsila "Safety Spare Parts for Wartsila 46 Engines" letter dated February 2000 (I2/701), identified that two of the kits be carried on board, and that, "This list of spare parts is intended to assist the operators in defining the parts necessary for operations at high reliability. It is advisable to keep the set complete, i.e. always when parts are consumed new ones should be ordered".
xxv) The spare parts kits were described as follows "sealing set for pump overhaul".
xxvi) The spare parts kits were not supplied with any instructions as to their use.
xxvii) The spare parts kits did not include an erosion plug nor a washer.
xxviii) At the time that WUK supplied the spare parts kits, WUK knew of the 1995 Warning Bulletin and the 1999 Warning Bulletin, but neither provided the Bulletins to AWSL nor provided any warning to AWSL, nor told AWSL that:-
a) only steel washers (which were not part of the kit), should be used and that copper washers should not be used or reused;b) that the recommended torque of erosion plugs had been increased from 200 Nm to 350 Nm on Wartsila 46 engines (having increased to 250 Nm on Wartsila 32 engines)c) that Wartsila was recommending that erosion plugs be secured on L'Orange pumps on Wartsila 32 engines.
i) WUK did not design or supply to Hyundai the original engines of the Baltic Eider or their fuel pumps.ii) WUK did not write, or have any responsibility for or input towards, the Operations and Maintenance Manual, the Spare Part Book or any updates.
iii) WUK did not write, or have any responsibility for or input towards technical documents except to distribute them under the WFI imprint.
iv) WUK had staff engineers who sent service reports to WFI in case of need but WUK had no responsibility for what use WFI made of them. [It is however accepted by WUK that they also sent direct reports to AWSL].
v) WUK was hardly ever responsible for engineers attending on the Baltic Eider, without representatives from WFI also being present. They attended on their own only twice in the 13 years before the fire. (WUK arranged the provision of engineers in September 1998 and August 1999 for work on camshaft and main bearings respectively, but it is accepted that WUK engineers attended with and under the supervision of WFI engineers on other occasions).
vi) WUK did not provide any engineering services to AWSL for the Baltic Eider in relation to fuel pumps.
vii) WUK did not supply any parts or services to the Baltic Eider in Finland. That was effected by WFI.
viii) WUK was not responsible for the R&D tests that took place between 1989 and 1998, which were arranged by WFI.
ix) WUK did supply, but did not design or test, engine parts in the UK.
x) AWSL obtained parts and services for the Baltic Eider from third parties other than WFI and WUK.
xi) WUK did not supply spare parts to AWSL in the years 1993 1996 when this was effected by another UK Company, connected to the Wartsila Group.
AWSL's claim
i) To take reasonable care in the design and/or manufacture and/or sale and/or supply of safe and suitable parts for the Wartsila 46 engines and fuel injection pumps, including the washers for the erosion plugs and spare part kits for fuel injection pump overhaul, together with the provision of appropriate associated instructions.ii) To provide proper advice and instructions as to the operation of these items and to take reasonable care in relation to the provision of such advice and instructions.
iii) To warn AWSL of any dangers to property or life presented by the items when operated, maintained or serviced in accordance with the recommendations with supply parts or spare parts kits provided by WFI and/or WUK.
The test under Part 24
The Supply Contract the copper washer
The Servicing Contract
The Overhaul Spare Parts Contract
" . It had been said before the reforms of 1994 (though in a speech dissenting on the general point in connection with which the words were uttered) that a potentially dangerous article might be unmerchantable if not accompanied by appropriate instructions as to use. This seems correct, and indeed there can presumably be goods, not dangerous, which are unusable, or not efficiently usable, without adequate instructions, and so not up to the present requirement of satisfactory quality, unless such instructions are supplied or available. The specific reference to safety in the new formulation makes this clear. ."
The claim in tort
i) WUK became part of the Wartsila Group in 1990 but sold parts only between 1990 and 1992 and from 1997 onwards whilst in the period 1993 to 1996 those parts were sold by a different company which was 25% owned by third parties outside the Wartsila Group.ii) WUK did not design, build or sell the engines fitted in the ship.
iii) The evidence shows that the large majority of attendances on the ship were by WFI.
iv) On occasions WUK service engineers attended the ship but usually under WFI supervision.
v) AWSL undoubtedly relied upon WUK to pass on to it any technical bulletins or other literature promulgated by WFI relating to the ship's engines which WFI told WUK to pass on but it was not credible to suggest that AWSL relied upon the skill and knowledge of anyone except WFI in relation to the contents of those documents.
vi) WUK made only two visits on its own to the ship without WFI's presence in the 13 years before the fire occurred and never effected any work in relation to the fuel pumps.
vii) WUK took no part in the R&D tests after 1989.
viii) WUK service engineers never worked on the fuel pumps of a Wartsila 46 engine belonging to anyone except for taking two fuel pumps off a land-based power station in March 1999 which were then forwarded to WFI for examination.
ix) In May 2001 there was a fire in a landbased Wartsila 46 engine installed in an Indian power station due to an erosion plug not being properly tightened but WUK was unaware of this fire until March 2002 at the earliest. Moreover that incident occurred only three months before the fire on the Baltic Eider, subsequent to the last overhaul of 4P and was due to operator error.
x) WUK, although aware of the 1995 and 1999 warning bulletins relating to Wartsila 32 engines, had no material upon which to draw any analogy with the Wartsila 46 engine and it was not their business to do so.
i) "Never use a sealing ring made in copper".
ii) "Make sure that the plugs are properly tightened with a torque of 350 NM plus/minus 5NM."
iii) That a locking wire was being introduced and could be used on existing pumps.
This subsequent warning supports AWSL's case against both WFI and WUK, both in relation to the copper washers and the torque where the Operation & Maintenance Manual still provided for 200 NM plus/minus 5NM to be applied to the erosion plug at the time of the incident. Mr Jewson in his first witness statement draws attention to the special position of engineers provided by engine manufacturers and distributors in relation to the safety requirements for the engines manufactured and supplied whether those engineers emanate from the manufacturer itself or from its locally incorporated company set up to deal with its customers. The engine Owner looks to the Group, however structured, for technical and safety advice and warnings in relation to the operation of the engines.
"because
(1) the Claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on its claim against the First Defendant, given that
(a) the First Defendant only supplied steel sealing rings to the Claimant, not copper sealing rings as alleged by the Claimant;
(b) the First Defendant cannot therefore be in breach of any contract with the Claimant;
(c) the First Defendant owed no duty to the Claimant as a consequence of the supply of a copper sealing ring;
(d) there was no special relationship between the Claimant and the First Defendant pursuant to which the First Defendant owed a duty the Claimant to advise or warn about any danger associated with the use of a copper sealing ring."
(1) The duty to warn, if established, would extend to a duty to warn against using or re-using the existing stock of copper washers on board the Vessel;(2) The duty to warn would also extend to a duty to advise AWSL of the correct torque setting for the erosion plugs on the fuel injection pumps;
(3) The duty would further extend to a duty to advise that it was essential to lock the erosion plugs in place.
"It seems to me that, independently of any warranty, a relation arises out of the contract of sale between the vendor and purchaser, which imposes on the former a duty towards the latter; namely a duty, if there is some dangerous quality in the goods sold, of which he knows, but of which the purchaser cannot be expected to be aware, of taking reasonable precautions in the way of warning the purchaser that special care will be requisite."
"A wide range of other persons may incur responsibility where injury or damage is caused through contact with a defective product. In Haseldine v. Daw & Son Ltd for example, a firm of engineers was held liable for negligence in repairing a hydraulic lift which fell, injuring a visitor in a block of flats. A representative selection of other modern cases has involved negligence in repairing the steering of a motor car and a fork lift truck; reconditioning a motor car; repairing and reassembling the wheel of a lorry; fitting a sidecar to a motorcycle; a valve to a ships boiler and an outlet pipe to discharge gasses from a boiler; and in installing an electric meter in a factory, a gas heating system in a house and a juke box in a restaurant. The negligence in such cases may take a variety of forms. For example a source of danger may have been created in a positive sense, as through mis-assembly, or the defendant may have failed to remedy a defect where this was reasonably to be expected."
Conclusions on realistic prospects of success/proper issues to be tried
Jurisdiction
"A person domiciled in a Member State may also be sued:
i) where he is one of a number of defendants, in the Courts for the place where any one of them is domiciled.
Conclusion