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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 >> UR Power GmbH v Kuok Oils and Grains Pte Ltd [2009] EWHC 1940 (Comm) (31 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/1940.html Cite as: [2009] 2 Lloyd's Rep 495, [2009] EWHC 1940 (Comm), [2009] 2 CLC 386 |
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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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2008 Folio No 1327 |
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U.R. POWER GmbH |
Claimant (Respondent in reference) |
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- and - |
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KUOK OILS AND GRAINS PTE LTD |
Respondent (Claimant in reference) |
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and between |
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2009 Folio No 28 |
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KUOK OILS AND GRAINS PTE LTD |
Claimant (Claimant in the reference) |
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- and – |
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U.R. POWER GmbH |
Respondent (Respondent in the reference) |
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Philippa Hopkins (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the Respondent/Claimant
Hearing dates: 21 May 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Gross :
INTRODUCTION
i) URP contends that the appeal award is of no effect because the tribunal did not have substantive jurisdiction under s.67(1)(b) of the Act; in summary, URP's case is that by reason of Kuok's failure to open a letter of credit, no binding contract was ever concluded between URP and Kuok and, accordingly, there was no arbitration agreement between the parties.
ii) URP seeks leave to appeal, under s.69 of the Act, on the following (alleged) questions of law arising out of the appeal award, in respect of which the Board of Appeal is said to have erred in law:
a) Whether there was a condition precedent to the formation of a contract (i.e., opening a letter of credit) and, if so, whether it was waived;
b) Whether the FOSFA Default Clause (clause 27 of FOSFA Form 80) sets an upper limit of recoverable damages of the difference between the contract price and the market price.
i) Under s. 68 (1) and (2)(a) of the Act and going to the date of termination of the contract and hence the quantum of damages, Kuok seeks an order setting aside or remitting parts of the appeal award to the tribunal, on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the appeal award, by reason of the tribunal's breach of its general duty under s.33 of the Act, in particular in:
a) Reaching its conclusions without properly considering evidence put before it by Kuok; and/or
b) Giving undue weight to a point raised at the last moment by URP to which Kuok was not given an adequate opportunity to respond.
ii) Kuok seeks leave to appeal, under s.69 of the Act, on the following (alleged) questions of law arising out of the appeal award, in respect of which the Board of Appeal is said to have erred in law:
a) Whether URP is to be treated as having been in default under the sale contract on the 30th November, 2006 (as found by the Board of Appeal) or on 31st May, 2007 (as found by the first tier arbitrators);
b) Whether (as the Board of Appeal found) the effect of an e-mail sent by Kuok to URP on the 20th December, 2006 was to terminate the sale contract;
c) Even if the answer to question b) is "yes", whether the parties thereafter revived the sale contract, such that URP was in further default on 31st May, 2007;
d) Whether the Board of Appeal's conclusion as to the 20th December, 2006 termination date was inconsistent with the remainder of the evidence and/or involved a failure to consider events after that date.
THE S.69 CHALLENGES
i) None of the challenges raised questions of general public importance; it follows that the test for leave is whether the decisions of the Board of Appeal in question (of course considered individually) were "obviously wrong" (s.69(3)(c)).
ii) I did not consider any of the decisions in question to be obviously wrong; per contra, in each case, I was inclined to the view that they were probably correct.
iii) URP challenge – a binding contract: On the findings contained in the appeal award, read fairly and as a whole, the Board of Appeal was at the least entitled to conclude that, by latest the 27th October, 2006, the parties had entered into a binding contract and that a letter of credit was not a condition precedent to its formation. Not infrequently, commercial men conclude agreements other than in text book style fashion. (For completeness and the avoidance of doubt, if and insofar as the Board of Appeal analysed the question (in part) in terms of variation rather than waiver, that was an approach it was entitled to adopt.) It is perhaps not inappropriate to add that URP's challenge to the existence of a binding contract flew in the face of the conclusions of both trade tribunals.
iv) URP challenge – the FOSFA Default Clause: The Board of Appeal was entitled to assess damages as it did; that assessment was permissible under cl. 27 of FOSFA Form 80 and was not precluded by Sanhe Hope v Toepfer International [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 458, upon which URP sought to rely.
v) Kuok challenge – termination date and revival of the contract: On the findings set out in the appeal award, the Board of Appeal was amply entitled to conclude that the contract was terminated on the 20th December, 2006 and was not revived thereafter; accordingly, the Board of Appeal was entitled to treat URP as having been in default on the 30th November, 2006. The Board of Appeal's conclusion as to the 20th December, 2006 termination date neither involved an error of law as to the remainder of the evidence nor as to any failure to consider events after the 20th December, 2006. For the purposes of deciding the Kuok s.69 application, I have throughout assumed that it was brought within time; I postpone, until my consideration of the Kuok s.68 challenge, the objection raised by URP that all Kuok's applications were out of time.
THE URP s.67 CHALLENGE
i) Whether URP is precluded from challenging the jurisdiction of the Board of Appeal?
ii) Whether the URP challenge is doomed on the ground of separability?
iii) Whether Kuok's obligation to open a letter of credit was a condition precedent to the conclusion of a binding contract?
In the light of my views as to question iii), it is convenient to take that question first and, thereafter, to comment briefly on questions i) and ii).
" The word 'condition' may refer either to an event, or to a term of a contract….Where 'condition' refers to an event, that event may be either an occurrence which neither party undertakes to bring about or the performance by one party of his undertaking. The first possibility is illustrated by a contract by which A is to work for B and B is to pay A £50, 'if it rains tomorrow'. Here the obligations of both parties are contingent on the happening of the specified event which may therefore be described as a contingent condition. The second possibility is illustrated by the ordinary case in which A agrees to work for B at a weekly wage payable at the end of the week. Here the contract is immediately binding on both parties, but B is not liable to pay until A has performed his promise to work. Such performance is a condition of B's liability and, as A has promised to render it , the condition may be described as promissory….."
"…made no comment or inference that due to the inconsistencies in the offered Letter of Credit that there was no contractual obligation between the parties. ….[URP] only pointed out the mistakes that they wanted to be rectified…."
"6.18 We believe that neither of these two potential conditions precedent to a binding contract would make commercial sense.
6.19 If there was an agreed commodity, price, volume, shipment period and origin (as is the case here) and the opening of the Letter of Credit were to be a condition precedent to the Contract being binding, then Buyers would simply not open the Letter of Credit if the market moved down and Sellers would have no recourse.
6.20 If there was an agreed commodity, price, volume, shipment period and origin (as is the case here) and the delivery of the POP Certificate were to be a condition precedent to the Contract being binding, then Seller would simply not deliver the POP if the market moved up and Buyers would have no recourse.
6.21 Neither scenario, in the Board's view, would have been contemplated at the time of negotiations. WE THEREFORE FIND THAT neither the opening of the Letter of Credit nor the delivery of the POP Certificate was a condition precedent to the contract being binding. "
Suffice to say that I emphatically agree.
"…a condition precedent to the opening of the Letter of Credit. In other words, Sellers were under the contractual obligation to deliver the POP Certificate….and only then were Buyers under the contractual obligation to open the Letter of Credit."
Again, so far as it is a matter for me, I agree.
" s.31
(1) An objection that the arbitral tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction at the outset of the proceedings must be raised by a party not later than the time he takes the first step in the proceedings to contest the merits of any matter in relation to which he challenges the tribunal's jurisdiction….
s.73
(1) If a party to arbitral proceedings takes part, or continues to take part, in the proceedings without making, either forthwith or within such time as is allowed by the arbitration agreement or the tribunal or by any provision of this Part, any objection –
(a) that the tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction….
he may not raise that objection later, before the tribunal or the court….."
(Italicisation added.)
"s.31
(4) Where an objection is duly taken to the tribunal's substantive jurisdiction and the tribunal has power to rule on its own jurisdiction, it may –
(a) rule on the matter in an award as to jurisdiction, or
(b) deal with the objection in its award on the merits.
s.73
(2) Where the arbitral tribunal rules that it has substantive jurisdiction and a party to arbitral proceedings who could have questioned that ruling -
(a) by any available arbitral process of appeal or review, or
(b) by challenging the award,
does not do so, or does not do so within the time allowed by the arbitration agreement or any provision of this Part, he may not object later to the tribunal's substantive jurisdiction on any ground which was the subject of that ruling. "
Mr. Collett's succinct submission was that the Board of Appeal had made a ruling on its substantive jurisdiction within s.31(4) of the Act and that URP's s.67 challenge was brought within the time allowed under s.73(2) of the Act. In the alternative, Mr. Collett submitted that, within the meaning of s.31(3) of the Act, the Board of Appeal had, or should be taken as having, admitted:
"…an objection later than the time specified in subsection (1) or (2) if it considers the delay justified."
If so, then the URP challenge fulfilled the requirements of s.73(1) of the Act.
i) The arbitral tribunal is empowered under s.30(1)(a) of the Act to rule on its own "substantive jurisdiction", inter alia, as to whether there is a valid arbitration agreement. The scope of the sub-section extends to a ruling by the tribunal as to whether there is an arbitration agreement in existence.
ii) S.30 of the Act thus gives effect to the concept of "Kompetenz Kompetenz". Accordingly, an issue as to whether the arbitration agreement is itself in existence can be determined by the arbitral tribunal, albeit not conclusively: see Vee Networks Ltd. v Econet Wireless International Ltd [2004] EWHC 2909 (Comm); [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 192, at [22].
iii) The right time for a party to object that an arbitral tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction, is that set out in s.31(1) of the Act (see above).
iv) If a party does not object within the time so allowed under s.31(1) of the Act, then, unless saved by the provisions of s.31(3), s.73(1) provides for that party to lose the right to object, both before the arbitral tribunal and the Court. See, Vee Networks (supra), at [23] – [27].
i) Had this point been determinative of the present application, I would have been minded to explore further with the parties and, possibly, the Board of Appeal, whether s.31(3) of the Act could properly be relied upon by URP. But such an inquiry would be wasteful of time and costs, where, as here, the answer would be academic.
ii) The logic of Ms Hopkins' submission does entail an attack on the Board of Appeal's decision to consider and rule upon URP's jurisdictional challenge. Again, more time and costs could easily have been expended in further analysis of any procedural complexities to which this consideration might have given rise.
" Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, an arbitration agreement which forms or was intended to form part of another agreement …..shall not be regarded as invalid, non-existent or ineffective because that other agreement is invalid, or did not come into existence or has become ineffective, and it shall for that purpose be treated as a distinct agreement."
" 19. Prior to the coming into force of the 1996 Act the English courts had worked out a doctrine of separability, as expressed in Harbour Assurance Co. (UK) Ltd. v Kansa General Insurance Co. Ltd. …, the substance of which was that, if the scope of an arbitration clause were sufficiently wide to cover the dispute, an arbitrator would, because of the separability of the agreement to arbitrate, have jurisdiction conclusively to determine whether the matrix contract was void ab initio, for example on the grounds of fraud or illegality, or was voidable, for example for misrepresentation or repudiatory breach. This jurisdiction was held to exist provided always that there was a binding agreement to arbitrate. The essence of the separability doctrine was that of insulation of the agreement to arbitrate from the matrix contract to the effect that the agreement to arbitrate would not be rendered void or invalid or avoided solely because the matrix contract was void or invalid or had been avoided. Unless the agreement to arbitrate was independently void or invalid, that agreement would remain in effect and the arbitrator could determine conclusively whether the matrix contract was enforceable. Thus, for example,…..if the matrix contract were illegal and void, that matter of illegality could be conclusively determined by the arbitrator unless the agreement to arbitrate was also independently rendered illegal and void by the legislation in question. However, where one of the parties to the arbitration had not agreed to become a party to the matrix contract it could invariably be said that the party in question was not bound by the arbitration agreement. That, however, is quite different from a case of statutory illegality, which renders the matrix contract void.
20. Section 7 of the 1996 Act reflects this concept of separability. Its effect in substance is to confirm that arbitrators have jurisdiction conclusively to determine issues on the voidness or voidability of the matrix contract to the effect that they do not lose jurisdiction by reason only that the matrix contract may be void or voidable. However, s.7 leaves intact the requirement that the arbitration agreement should be valid and binding. If it is not valid and binding for reasons other than the bare fact that the matrix contract is not valid and binding, then s.7 does not enable arbitrators to exercise conclusive jurisdiction in respect of any issue relating to the matrix contract…… "
"17. The principle of separability enacted in section 7 means that the invalidity or rescission of the main contract does not necessarily entail the invalidity or rescission of the arbitration agreement. The arbitration agreement must be treated as a 'distinct agreement' and can be void or voidable only on grounds which relate directly to the arbitration agreement….
18. …..Even if the allegation is that there was no concluded agreement (for example, that terms of the main agreement remained to be agreed) that is not necessarily an attack on the arbitration agreement. If the arbitration clause has been agreed, the parties will be presumed to have intended the question of whether there was a concluded main agreement to be decided by arbitration.
19. ….Mr Butcher QC, who appeared for the owners, said that but for the bribery, the owners would not have entered into any charter with the charterers and therefore would not have entered into an arbitration agreement. But that is ….exactly the kind of argument which section 7 was intended to prevent. It amounts to saying that because the main agreement and the arbitration agreement were bound up with each other, the invalidity of the main agreement should result in the invalidity of the arbitration agreement….. "
i) To my mind, the wording of s.7 of the Act makes it plain that even though the underlying contract never came into existence, the arbitration agreement may still be binding. In this regard, it is worth underlining the wording in s.7 "or was intended to form part of" and "or did not come into existence". See too, Russell on Arbitration (23rd ed.), at para. 2-008. It is in any event at least a tenable view that, in this context, too much can sometimes be made of the distinction between a contract which is void and one which never came into existence: see, Fouchard Gaillard Goldman on International Commercial Arbitration, at para. 411.
ii) So far as concerns authority, even if Lord Hoffmann's observations at [18] of his speech in Fiona Trust (supra) are obiter, they are, with respect, of very great persuasive force. Moreover, they are very much in point. For my part, I do not read anything said by Colman J in Vee Networks (supra), as telling against the provisional conclusion to which I am attracted; the observations of Colman J at the end of [19] were directed at a somewhat different situation.
iii) In principle, therefore, an arbitration agreement may be binding even though the underlying contract has not come into existence. With respect to Mr. Collett's argument to the contrary, it does not follow that in every case where pre-contractual negotiations have not resulted in a binding (underlying or matrix) contract, an arbitration clause discussed in the course of those negotiations would be binding. Whether it is or not will necessarily be a question of fact and degree, depending on the circumstances of the individual case.
iv) In the present case, by the 25th October and even more so by the 27th October, 2006, there was on any view a very considerable measure of agreement between the parties. By the 27th October, as set out in para. 6.15 of the Appeal Award, such agreement extended to: (1) the goods (Nigerian crude palm oil); (2) the quantity (10,000 mt); (3) the CIF nature of the transaction, including a nominated load and discharge port; (4) the price ($480.00 per mt); (5) the incorporation of FOSFA 80, so including the agreement to arbitrate (cl. 30 of FOSFA 80); (6) payment by transferable letter of credit to be opened and confirmed after delivery of the POP Certificate, with detailed documentary instructions.
v) Against this background, it is at least strongly arguable that the outline of the agreement of which the agreed arbitration clause (cl. 30 of FOSFA 80) was intended to form part, was clear indeed. There was in particular no doubt and had not been since the 18th October that the parties intended their disputes arising out of their (intended) contract to be referred to arbitration; the incorporation of FOSFA 80 had been agreed since then. All that remained was the discrete question of whether Kuok's obligation to open a conforming letter of credit was or (on one view) remained a contingent condition precedent and so stood in the way of the parties having entered into a binding contract. There is, to my mind, at least a powerful argument for concluding that the parties must be taken to have intended that discrete question to be referred to arbitration in accordance with FOSFA 80. It is perhaps to be underlined that the question here went not to the existence of any consensus ad idem but instead to the nature of Kuok's obligation.
THE KUOK s.68 CHALLENGE
i) Whether the Kuok s.68 application was brought in time?
ii) The merits of the Kuok s.68 application.
Given the view I take on issue ii), I shall deal with that issue first, proceeding on the assumption that Kuok can overcome such difficulties as it faces under issue i). Thereafter, I shall briefly express my views on the questions raised under issue i).
" (1) A party to arbitral proceedings may ….apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award…..
(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant –
(a) Failure by the tribunal to comply with section 33 (general duty of tribunal);"
In turn, S.33 of the Act is in the following terms:
" (1) The tribunal shall –
(a) act fairly and impartially as between the parties, giving each party a reasonable opportunity of putting his case and dealing with that of his opponent…..
(2) The tribunal shall comply with that general duty in conducting the arbitral proceedings, in its decisions on matters of procedure and evidence and in the exercise of all other powers conferred on it."
i) That the Board of Appeal did not consider post- 20th December, 2006 materials (with the exception of the invoices referred to under ii) below).
ii) That the Board of Appeal gave undue weight to the Kuok monthly reminders, adduced only the day before the hearing and with which Kuok was not given a proper opportunity to deal.
The underlying aim of the application is of course to push back the date of termination, with a view to increasing the damages awarded to Kuok, ideally restoring the quantum of damages awarded to it under the first tier award.
"There are no reasons for the Board to consider any issues after this date."
"Attempts by Sellers to anyhow further try to execute the Contract and the fact that Buyers would most probably have accepted such an execution to replace the invoices for default damages (in a sharply rising market) do not alter the fact that the Contract was terminated on 20 December 2006 and that the only remaining contractual right of Buyers was to receive payment of these default damages. "
For that matter, though admittedly focussed on the invoices (or reminders) of which Kuok next makes complaint, paras. 6.47 – 6.49 of the appeal award are plainly dealing with post- 20th December materials.
" ….one cannot have it both ways: on the one hand declare the contract at an end on 20 December 2006 and invoice default damages in the total amount of US$1,439,432.00 (and keep sending reminders of this invoice) and on the other stimulate a seller to execute a no longer existing contract (at a low contract price compared to a sharply rising market); i.e., never officially reopen the contract but then still declare the seller in default when it becomes clear that he cannot execute this tonnage; and then 'replace' the old default damage invoice with a new one that is about US$2,000,000 higher."
" Any application or appeal must be brought within 28 days of the date of the award or, if there has been any arbitral process of appeal or review, of the date when the applicant or appellant was notified of the result of that process."
i) First, I am unable to accept that this wording applies to appeals within well-known two tier arbitration schemes such as FOSFA or that of the Grain and Feed Trades Association ("GAFTA"). I was not referred by either party to any case where it was suggested that this wording was somehow applicable to arbitrations of this nature; if the Kuok construction was correct, it is surprising that there have not been any such authorities. To the contrary, it seems far more likely that the relevant date has been at least assumed to be the date of the appeal award in such schemes. See, for instance, AHT v Tradigrain [2002] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 512, at [64].
ii) Secondly, the construction suggested by Kuok could readily result in a different cut-off date for applications brought by each party; on the Kuok construction, time would start counting only when the individual party was notified of the result in question. At first blush and as a matter of practicality, it would be surprising if Parliament had legislated to produce such an outcome.
iii) Thirdly, there can be no doubting the status of the Advisory Committee of the Department of Industry ("the DAC") and the considerable weight to be given to its views on the clauses of the Bill preceding the Act. In its Report of February, 1996, the DAC said this (at para. 294) of the then cl. 70(3), now s.70(3):
"….It is possible that the time limit in Clause 70(3) will have expired by the time an award is released. However, the DAC is of the view that the date of the award is the only incontrovertible date from which the time period should run. Any other starting point would result in great uncertainty (e.g. as to the exact point at which an award is 'released' or 'delivered'). Further, any difficulties arising from specific circumstances can be easily remedied by way of an extension of time ….."
It is of course fair to say that this passage in the DAC's February 1996 Report does not by itself answer the question of interpretation which has arisen here. It says nothing as to the meaning of the key words in s.70(3) relied upon by Kuok. But the DAC was clearly interested in promoting certainty and the Kuok interpretation of s.70(3) would produce the very uncertainty the DAC was anxious to avoid.