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 >> Andromeda Marine SA v OW Bunker & Trading A/S [2006] EWHC 777 (Comm) (11 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/777.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 777 (Comm), [2006] 2 All ER (Comm) 331, [2006] ILPr 37, [2006] 1 CLC 730, [2006] 2 Lloyd's Rep 319 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ANDROMEDA MARINE SA |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
O W BUNKER & TRADING A/S |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Guy Blackwood (instructed by Barlow Lyde & Gilbert) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Friday 31 March and Thursday 6 April 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Morison :
Background
"As per your request we hereby attach the Bominflot General Terms and Conditions that covered the supply for the MANA. Your special attention is drawn on clauses 2.5 and 7.14. As for the stamp affixed on the Bunker Delivery Receipts same fact has been discussed with our US lawyers as well, who advised that such stamp with reference to above clauses has no value and the maritime lien on the vessel as per US law remains valid."
Thank you for your e-mail of September 28 2005, together with the attachment (Bominflot terms and conditions).In regard to the stamp on the bunker receipts, which is not legible to us, we take it from your comments that the language of the stamp is such that it notifies the supplier that the delivery is for charterer's account and not for the owners and/or the vessel, or at least language to that effect. We will also ask owners whether they have a clear copy of the bunker and receipts and revert.
In further response to your comments about the validity of the stamp, we were a little surprised to read that Mr. Seele advised that such clauses have no value. Assuming that the time charter between Sea Bridge and owners contained a prohibition of lien clause (we are in the process of obtaining a copy of the charter party from owners) and also that the stamp or stamps on the bunker receipts were placed before the delivery was made, thus giving the supplier actual notice of the no lien clause, there is case law in the U.S. that would support owners' position to defeat a theory of maritime lien. This, of course, assumes that U.S. law would apply to this claim, which we would deny, as opposed to English law (per clause 18.1 of Bominflot's terms and conditions). It is our understanding from previous cases that English law does not provide for a maritime lien in favour of a supplier. In this regard please note that there is considerable legal authority in the U.S. which would recognise the choice of law provision contained in the agreement, therefore even if litigation was initiated in the U.S. against the vessel the U.S. court would most likely enforce clause 18.1 of the terms and conditions and apply English law.
We have requested from owners legible copies of the bunker receipts and if necessary we are also prepared to contact Bominflot who should have legible copies.
"I state that the High Court of England & Wales has power under the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982, the defendant being a party to an agreement conferring jurisdiction to which Article 17 of Schedule 1 or 3C to that Act or paragraph 12 of Schedule 4 to that Act applies, to hear the claim and that no proceedings are pending between the parties …"
"The supply referred to was contracted with the 3rd Defendant, at that time charterer of the ship, however with the express direction that this letter 'and/or the Captain or owner of the Ship, and/or the charterers and/or the Ship MANA' was/ were responsible for payment".
"a creditor who has a reasonable suspicion of losing the security over the capital of its credit is enabled to make application for the arrest of the property of the debtor"
"The specific content of the charter contract in question is unknown in terms of whether the commercial management of the ship and the responsibility for expenses in respect of the supply of oil are deemed to have been transferred.Nevertheless, the mere ownership of the ship and the existence of preferred credit [a phrase which might be better translated as maritime lien] imputes legitimacy on the first defendant [Andromeda] i.e. independently of the declared holder of the debt, [Andromeda] shall always be a legitimate party for the effects of undertaking defence against judicial seizure of property belonging to it."
The Parties' Arguments
(1) Article 17 of the Brussels Convention provides that
"If the parties, one or more of whom is domiciled in a Contracting State, have agreed that a court or the courts of a Contracting State are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which may have arisen or which may arise in connection with a particular legal relationship, that court or those courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction. …"
In the present claim it is precisely the case for Andromeda that they were not parties to the contract for the sale of bunkers; they assert as much in paragraph 4 of their particulars of claim and seek a declaration to that effect. Yet they assert that this court has jurisdiction by virtue of a clause in a contract to which they were not a party. Accordingly, this is not a case, as the claimants themselves assert, where the parties have agreed to the jurisdiction of the English Court. OW Bunker is 'domiciled' in Denmark and should have been sued there.
(2) There is no provision in the Convention similar to the provisions of Part 6.20(7) of the CPR which provides that
"A claim is made for a declaration that no contract exists where, if the contract was found to exist it would comply with the conditions set out in paragraph (5)."
The Convention is simply distributing jurisdiction between the Member States by specific rules; if the claimant asserts that there is no contract and no agreement to confer jurisdiction on the courts of a State other than where the putative defendant is domiciled then only the courts of the domicile are the courts to whom disputes have been allocated, in cases such as this.
(3) In any event, OW Bunker have never asserted that Andromeda were parties to the contract. The Email of 28 September makes it clear that they were asserting a maritime lien over the vessel by virtue of US law. OW Bunker have made it clear that they exercised the right of arrest so as to secure the claim to a maritime lien and proceedings have been commenced in the Texas District courts making that assertion. The claim is, therefore for a negative injunction which is entirely hypothetical.
(1) The question at issue is whether the Claimant can demonstrate a good arguable case that Article 17 of the Brussels/Lugano Convention applies in the circumstances which pertained at the time when the proceedings were issued [or served]. In ISC Technologies Ltd & Another v James Howard Guerin & Others [1992] Vol 2 Lloyd's Law Reports page 430 at page 434 Hoffmann J. said this:
"Mr Crystal said I should look at the position today. An application made under RSC O.12 r.8 is a re-hearing of the application to the Master and the exercise of a fresh discretion. It should therefore take into account whatever has happened since. I do not agree. The application is under RSC O12 rule 8(1)(c) to discharge the Master's order giving leave to serve out. The question is therefore whether that order was rightly made at the time it was made. Of course the Court can receive evidence which was not before the Master and subsequent events may throw light upon what should have been relevant considerations at the time. But I do not think that leave which was rightly given should be discharged simply because circumstances have changed. That would mean that different answers could be given depending upon how long it took before the application came on to be heard."
(2) As at January 2006, it was the case for OW Bunker that Andromeda were party to a contract which contained a jurisdiction clause to this effect;
"This agreement is subject to the law and jurisdiction of the courts of England … However, nothing in this clause shall, in the event of breach of the Agreement by Buyer, preclude Seller from taking any such action as it shall in its sole discretion consider necessary to enforce, safeguard or secure its rights under the Contract in any court or tribunal in any state or country."
(3) The fact that when their present solicitors came on the scene in March 2006 they said that it was not OW Bunker's case that Andromeda were party to the contract, does not thereby render the issue and service of the proceedings academic or change the arguments under Article 17, which must be judged as at January 2006. Despite what the English solicitors said, in the USA in in rem proceedings issued on March 13 2006, OW Bunker alleged that
"In the exercise of commerce, on 6 April 2005, the plaintiff entered into a contract at the request of the Master and/or those in charge of the vessel and upon the credit of the vessel for the supply of bunkers … all in accordance with the sales confirmation …"
At paragraph 11 of the complaint, the plaintiff relied upon the Maritime Lien Act and at paragraph 11 and 12 the plaintiff sought to recover (i) interest "as contractually and legally allowed, both pre- and post-judgment at the highest rate allowable by law or contract"; and (ii) "as a result of defendants breaches of contractual agreement … attorneys' fees and expenses incurred by it resulting from said breaches." It is clear, she submitted, that whilst OW Bunker were saying one thing in this jurisdiction, they were saying the opposite in another.
Furthermore, in that action, contrary to what the court was initially told, the plaintiffs in the USA proceedings are asking for the vessel to be seized by the US Marshal "to be held as security against any judgment to be entered herein." It was OW Bunker's case that they were not intending to arrest the vessel for the second time to obtain security, with the risk that this would be unlawful under the Arrest Convention [Article 3(3)]. Yet the claim for seizure was stipulated to be for the purpose of security. There is some evidence that the claim in contract was not between the Owners and OW Bunker but rather between the vessel and OW Bunker. I ought to express no view on the issue as to whether it would be lawful for the vessel to be arrested in the USA. That is an issue for the courts of that country.
(4) For the purposes of Article 17, the express term of the Agreement relating to jurisdiction is to be treated as an exclusive jurisdiction clause.
(5) Ms Troy-Davies referred me to the case of Dresser UK Ltd v Falcongate Ltd [1992] 1QB 502 at page 511. There, the Court of Appeal was considering whether an exclusive jurisdiction clause in a bill of lading bound entities which were not parties to the contract. At page 511, Bingham LJ concluded:
"Here is the defendants' difficulty. Had the question arisen between Falcongate and the defendants, there would be no doubt that the clause had been agreed between them. Had Falcongate contracted as agents of the plaintiffs, the answer would have been the same. So it would if the plaintiffs sued as holders of the bill of lading to whom all Falcongate's rights and obligations under the contract of carriage had been transferred: Partenreederei ms. Tilly Russ v. Haven & Vervoebedriff Nova N.V. [1985] QB 931. But none of these situations existed here. So the question which has to be asked is whether the plaintiffs agreed with the defendants that the Rotterdam court should have exclusive jurisdiction to entertain disputes between them. Even accepting the defendants' explanation of the doctrine of bailment on terms as depending on the bailor's express or implied consent to the bailee's sub-bailment of goods on certain terms, the resulting relationship between the bailor and sub-bailee cannot in my view be aptly described as depending on agreement. The doctrine has evolved because the bailor cannot sue the sub-bailee in contract; but a contract is what, as I think, the first sentence of article 17 demands.
After what I take to have been briefer argument, the judge formed the same view. He said:
"The plaintiffs have not agreed…to submit the claim that they are making in this action to the courts of the Netherlands. Article 17 of the Brussels Convention accordingly does not apply."
Although with some reluctance, because the doctrine of bailment on terms is a pragmatic legal recognition of commercial reality, I feel bound to hold that, even where it applies, it cannot satisfy the requirements of article 17."
(6) She then referred me to a decision of the European Court of Justice in the matter of Corek Maritime GmbH v Handelsveem BV and Others, [2000] ECR 1-09337 which, she submitted, gave support for the proposition that Article 17 applied where a person who was not a party to the contract with the choice of jurisdiction clause in it, and had not succeeded to the rights, had otherwise accepted the jurisdiction clause in question. Here there was a good arguable case that Andromeda had accepted the jurisdiction clause as binding on them in relation to the claims made against them by OW Bunker as was clear from the issue of the proceedings in this jurisdiction. She relied upon the fact that OW Bunker had alleged that the Bominflot terms bound Andromeda; OW Bunker were relying on the Confirmation of Order document in the Portuguese proceedings and it was not until 1 March 2006 that OW Bunker, for the first time averred that they did not hold Andromeda liable under the contract with Sea Bridge. And on this point she referred me to a decision of the Norwegian Supreme Court Nordic American Shipping AS v KS AS Manhattan Tankers [1996] International Litigation Procedure at page 400. There, the court held that a charterer's claim in general average based on the charterparty which contained a jurisdiction clause conferring jurisdiction on the English Courts "must take place in the chosen forum even if it is against an entity other than the plaintiff's immediate contracting party, such as an earlier charterer in a chain of cub-charters."
(7) Her third main argument was that the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 applied. Here, there was a term which purported to confer a benefit on Andromeda under section 1(1)(b) of the Act. She submitted that the Sales Confirmation document properly identified Andromeda and the Vessel so as to fulfil the requirements of section 1(3). In these circumstances, Andromeda had available to them any remedy which they would have had had they been a party to the contract, including, as here a right to negative injunctive relief.
Decision
"13.The Court has held that, by making the validity of a jurisdiction clause subject to the existence of an 'agreement between the parties', Article 17 of the Convention imposes on the court before which the matter is brought the duty of examining first whether the clause conferring jurisdiction upon it was in fact the subject of consensus between the parties, which must be clearly and precisely demonstrated, and that the purpose of the requirements as to form imposed by Article 17 is to ensure that consensus between the parties is in fact established (Case 24/76 Estasis Salotti v RÜWA [1976] ECR 1831, paragraph 7, Case 25/76 Segoura v Bonakdarian [1976] ECR 1851, paragraph 6, and Case C-106/95 MSG v Gravières Rhénanes [1997] ECR 1-911, paragraph 15).14. However, if the purpose of Article 17 of the Convention is to protect the wishes of the parties concerned, it must be construed in a manner consistent with those wishes where they are established. Article 17 is based on a recognition of the independent will of the parties to a contract in deciding which courts are to have jurisdiction to settle disputes falling within the scope of the Convention, other than those which are expressly excluded pursuant to the fourth paragraph of Article 17 (Case 23/78 Meeth v Glacetal [1978] ECR 2133, paragraph 5).
15. It follows that the words 'have agreed' in the first sentence of the first paragraph of Article 17 of the Convention cannot be interpreted as meaning that it is necessary for a jurisdiction clause to be formulated in such a way that the competent court can be determined on its wording alone. It is sufficient that the clause state the objective factors on the basis of which the parties have agreed to choose a court or the courts to which they wish to submit disputes which have arisen or which may arise between them. Those factors, which must be sufficiently precise to enable the court seised to ascertain whether it has jurisdiction, may, where appropriate, be determined by the particular circumstances of the case.
……………
22. By its third question, the national court essentially asks whether a jurisdiction clause which has been agreed between a carrier and a shipper and appears in a bill of lading is valid as against any third party bearer of the bill of lading or whether it is only valid as against a third party bearer of the bill of lading who succeeded by virtue of the applicable national law to the shipper's rights and obligations when he acquired the bill of lading.
23. It is sufficient to note that the Court has held that, in so far as the jurisdiction clause incorporated in a bill of lading is valid under Article 17 of the Convention as between the shipper and the carrier, it can be pleaded against the third party holding the bill of lading so long as, under the relevant national law, the holder of the bill of lading succeeds to the shipper's rights and obligations (Tilly Russ, paragraph 24, and Castelletti, paragraph 41).
24. It follows that the question whether a party not privy to the original contract against whom a jurisdiction clause is relied on has succeeded to the rights and obligations of one of the original parties must be determined according to the applicable national law.
25. If he did, there is no need to ascertain whether he accepted the jurisdiction clause in the original contract. In such circumstances, acquisition of the bill of lading could not confer upon the third party more rights than those attaching to the shipper under it. The third party holding the bill of lading thus becomes vested with all the rights, and at the same time becomes subject to all the obligations, mentioned in the bill of lading, including those relating to the agreement on jurisdiction (Tilly Russ, paragraph 25).
26. On the other hand, if, under the applicable national law, the party not privy to the original contract did not succeed to the rights and obligations of one of the original parties, the court seised must ascertain, having regard to the requirements laid down in the first paragraph of Article 17 of the Convention, whether he actually accepted the jurisdiction clause relied on against him.
27. Accordingly, the reply to the third question must be that a jurisdiction clause agreed between a carrier and a shipper which appears in a bill of lading is enforceable against a third party bearer of the bill of lading if he succeeded to the rights and obligations of the shipper under the applicable national law when he acquired the bill of lading. If he did not, it must be ascertained whether he accepted that clause having regard to the requirements laid down in the first paragraph of Article 17 of the Convention."
"Article 17 of the Convention sets out to designate, clearly and precisely, a court in a Contracting State which is to have exclusive jurisdiction in accordance with the consensus formed between the parties, which is to be expressed in accordance with the strict requirements as to form laid down therein. The legal certainty which that provision seeks to secure could easily be jeopardized if one party to the contract could frustrate that rule of the Convention simply by claiming that the whole of the contract was void on grounds derived from the applicable substantive law."