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 >> Whitesea Shipping and Trading Corporation & Anor v El Paso Rio Clara Ltd & Ors [2009] EWHC 2552 (Comm) (21 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/2552.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2552 (Comm), [2010] 1 Lloyd's Rep 648, [2009] 2 CLC 596 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
WHITESEA SHIPPING AND TRADING CORPORATION AND ANOTHER |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
EL PASO RIO CLARA LTDA AND OTHERS |
Defendants |
____________________
Nigel Jacobs QC (instructed by Waltons & Morse) for the First, Second and Fourth to Sixteenth Defendants
Hearing date: 16 October 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Flaux:
Introduction
Factual background
"1. DEFINITIONS
f. "Subcontractor" includes stevedores, longshoremen, lighters, terminal operators, warehousemen, truckers, agents, servants, any person, firm, corporation or other legal entity who performs services incidental to the goods and/or the carriage of the goods, including direct and indirect subcontractors and their servants and agents.
3. SUBCONTRACTING
a. The carrier shall be entitled to subcontract on any terms the whole or any part of the carriage, loading, unloading, storing, warehousing, handling and any and all duties whatsoever undertaken by the carrier in relation to the goods.
b. [1] The merchant undertakes that no claims or allegations shall be made against any servant, agent, stevedore or subcontractor of the carrier which imposes or attempts to impose upon any of them or any vessel owned or chartered by any of them any liability whatsoever in connection with the goods, [2] and if such claim or allegation should nevertheless be made, to indemnify the carrier against all consequences thereof. [3] Without prejudice to the foregoing, every servant, agent, stevedore and subcontractor shall have the benefit of all provisions herein benefiting the carrier as if such provisions were expressly for their benefit, and all limitations of and exonerations from liability provided to the carrier by law and by the terms hereof shall be available to them, and in entering into this contract the carrier, to the extent of those provisions, does so not only on its own behalf, but also as agent and trustee for such servants, agents, stevedores and subcontractors.
c. The defences and limits of liability provided for in this bill of lading shall apply in any action whether the action be founded in contract or in tort."
I have retained the division of clause 3b into three numbered parts suggested by Mr Jacobs for the purposes of argument.
The Claimants' case
The insurer Defendants' objection: the application of Article III rule 8
"Any clause, covenant or agreement in a contract of carriage relieving the carrier or the ship from liability for loss or damage to or in connection with the goods, arising from negligence, fault, or failure in the duties and obligations provided in this section, or lessening such liability otherwise than as provided in this chapter, shall be null and void and of no effect."
(1) The first part of clause 3b is a covenant not to sue given not only to the Claimants as carriers but to any third party who falls within the third part of the clause, the so-called Himalaya contract. One of the provisions of which the third party has the benefit by virtue of the third part of the clause is the first part of the clause.
(2) Once the third party is performing "carriage" obligations (as it is alleged the third parties who are being sued in Brazil were), then, even though the third party is not actually a party to the bill of lading contract, the Himalaya contract is itself a contract of carriage which is subject to the Hague Rules.
(3) The effect of entitling either the carrier under the bill of lading contract or the third party to enforce the covenant not to sue in the first part of clause 3b would be to confer blanket immunity upon the third party, which is contrary to Article III rule 8 of the Hague Rules to which the Himalaya contract is subject. Accordingly, the first part of clause 3b is null and void and of no effect.
"(1) It is hereby expressly agreed that no servant or agent of the carrier (including any person who performs work on behalf of the vessel on which the goods are carried or of any of the other vessels of the carrier, their cargo, their passengers or their baggage, including towage of and assistance and repairs to the vessels and including every independent contractor from time to time employed by the carrier) shall in any circumstances whatsoever be under any liability whatsoever to the shipper, for any loss, damage or delay of whatsoever kind arising or resulting directly or indirectly from any act neglect or default on his part while acting in the course of or in connection with his employment and,
(2) without prejudice to the generality of the provisions in this Bill of Lading, every exemption limitation, condition and liberty herein contained and every right exemption from liability, defence and immunity of whatsoever nature applicable to the carrier or to which the carrier is entitled hereunder shall also be available to and shall extend to protect every such servant or agent of the carrier [ * ] is or shall be deemed to be acting on behalf of and for the benefit of all persons who are or might be his servants or agents (including any person who performs work on behalf of the vessel on which the goods are carried or of any of the other vessels of the carrier, their cargo, their passengers or their baggage, including towage of and assistance and repairs to the vessels and including every independent contractor from time to time employed by the carrier)
(3) and all such persons shall to this extent be deemed to be parties to the contract contained in or evidenced by this Bill of Lading
(4) The shipper shall indemnify the carrier against any claim by third parties against whom the carrier cannot rely on these conditions, in as far as the carrier's liability would be excepted if said parties over bound by these conditions."
"115. Mr Jacobs on behalf of the claimants, on the other hand, submits that part 1 of the clause applies only to the carrier, who alone is entitled to enforce by means of this provision a total prohibition on any collateral attack on him by means of any suit by the shipper against third parties; that it is only part 2 with its more limited exemption that applies to such third parties and that the introductory words are intended to signify the insulation of part 2 from part 1; that the words of part 3 look back ("to this extent") to the words of part 2 and not to the clause as a whole; and that, in accordance with the purpose of the clause as a whole, which is to extend to third parties the protection enjoyed by the carrier under the bill of lading, no less and no more, the Hague Rules paramount provision contained in article III, rule 8, incorporated with the rest of the Hague Rules, ensures that third parties, like the carrier itself, cannot enjoy a blanket exclusion of liability.
116. Colman J preferred the submissions of the claimants to those of the owner (see at 99/100) and I agree. The essence of the matter is that part 1 of the clause does not give to the carrier a personal blanket exemption of liability, which is then extended to third parties within the clause, but is only concerned with granting to the carrier an exceptional right, not granted to any other party, to enforce, if necessary by injunction, a complete prohibition on any suit by holders of the bill against third parties within the clause: see Nippon Yusen Kaisha v. International Import & Export Co Ltd (The Elbe Maru) [1978] 1 Lloyd's Rep 206. I do not think I can put the various considerations better than Colman J has put them himself, but I would seek to refer to them briefly as follows.
(1) There is no sign in the leading cases on the Himalaya clause, The Eurymedon, The New York Star, and The Makhutai, each of them in the Privy Council, of any reliance on part 1 of the clause or of finding there a complete exemption of liability for the benefit of third parties. Mr Berry submits that that is not surprising in that at any rate the first two of those cases relied on the bills' Hague Rules one year time bar – and that a time bar is as good as a blanket exemption, so that there was no need to raise an additional point under part 1 of the clause. That may be so, but it does not explain why the additional point was not taken, if there to be taken, nor why in The New York Star at 142E/F and again at 143E/F Lord Wilberforce explained the function of the Himalaya clause, which was present there in very similar (albeit not identical terms) to clause 5 here, as being, for instance, to extend "the benefit of defences and immunities conferred by the bill of lading upon the carrier to independent contractors employed by the carrier"; nor why in The Makhutai, where again the clause was similar but not identical, and where the issue was whether an exclusive jurisdiction clause was available for the benefit of the shipowner, the shipowner did not simply apply to strike out the claim as a whole. There it was this time Lord Goff of Chieveley who described the function of the Himalaya clause (at 666G) as –
"to prevent cargo owners from avoiding the contractual defences available to the carrier (typically the exceptions and limitations in the Hague-Visby Rules) by suing in tort persons who perform the contractual services on the carrier's behalf."
(2) In The Elbe Maru, the clause read "The Merchant undertakes that no claim or allegation shall be made against any servant, agent or sub-contractor of the Carrier which imposes or attempts to impose…any liability whatsoever…and, if any such claim or allegation should nevertheless be made, to indemnify the Carrier against all consequences thereof." That may be a clause which states the obligation not to sue third parties more clearly than the wording of clause 5: but I am not concerned with the effectiveness of part 1 as a promise not to sue, and it will be seen that in essence parts 1 and 4 of clause 5 amount or are intended to amount to the same promise given to the carrier by the shipper not to impose any liability whatsoever on the carrier's servants or agents. Thus part 4 is a promise by the shipper to the carrier to indemnify the carrier against any claim by parties against whom the carrier cannot rely on "these conditions…". It will be seen moreover that part 1 of the clause taken by itself is not extended to benefit third parties, unlike part 2, and that this emphasises that the function of part 1 is to benefit the carrier itself rather than its servants or agents.
(3) If part 1 had the effect contended for by Mr Berry, then part 2 would be redundant and unnecessary. The argument against surplusage may not be the strongest of weapons, but it is certainly an unsatisfactory and dangerous way of drafting for a blanket exception to go on in part 2 to provide third parties the merely inferior protection of the benefit of the carrier's own protection, if they had already been granted a complete exemption, beyond the carrier's own protection, under part 1 of the clause. Moreover the link words between part 1 and part 2 ("without prejudice" etc) do not say "without prejudice to the foregoing", which is how Mr Berry would wish to read them, but look forward rather than back.
(4) While it is true that the word "right" appears among the other nouns in part 2, nothing in its surrounding context suggests that it looks backwards to the right of the carrier under part 1 to have its servants and agents exonerated of all liability whatsoever. Surrounded as it is by words of exemption, defence, immunity and so on, the word "right" must rather refer to rights which go to protect the carrier itself, such as a right for instance to commence a limitation action. Mr Berry concedes that "right" cannot be given its natural meaning to include all rights given to a carrier under its bill of lading contract, because it is accepted that the function of the Himalaya clause is not to transfer to third parties the carrier's rights, eg to freight or other payments, but only its defences.
(5) The words in part 3 "to this extent" do not apply to the whole of the preceding clause, but naturally look back to the words in part 2 "shall extend to protect every such person".
(6) Article III, rule 8 of the Hague Rules is incompatible with the idea that third parties to whom the benefit of the carrier's defences are extended, should have a blanket exemption from liability.
117. For these reasons, I consider, in agreement with Colman J, that clause 5 only protects the owner to the same extent as the carrier is itself protected by the bill of lading provisions under its contract of carriage. Since the carrier would have no exemption for negligent stowage, it follows that its independent contractor, typically a stevedore but here the shipowner itself, can have no exemption either."
The shipowners have escaped from being the original contracting carriers by relying upon the doctrine of privity of contract and the way in which the bills of lading were signed. They have brought themselves back in as a contracting carrier by relying upon clause 5 in the bills of lading and the privity of contract which it expressly creates.
155. It is argued that the 'Himalaya' clause contract is "collateral" to the bill of lading contract and therefore is not to be affected by such considerations as the Hague Rules. Why the use of the epithet "collateral" should have this effect is not clear. It does not address or affect the essential question: what is the 'Barwick' contract? In so far as a 'Himalaya' clause may include additional stipulations as between the person issuing the bill of lading and the shipper such as jurisdiction clauses or covenants not to sue, it may well be correct to use the word "collateral". But even then the substance may have to be looked at not just the form: The Hollandia [1983] 1 AC 565. But, as regards the persons referred to in the clause, clause 5 says that it is, for the purposes of all the provisions of the clause, made on behalf of such persons and to that extent all such persons shall "be deemed to be parties to the contract contained in or evidenced by this bill of lading". As between those persons and the shipper the resultant contract is not 'collateral'; it is the contract. The purpose of the additional use of these express words is to procure that transferees of the bill of lading shall be bound as well as the shipper: see the final sentence of the quotes from Lord Reid (sup) and Lord Wilberforce (sup). Clause 5 deliberately makes the contract between such persons and the shipper part of the bill of lading contract so as to obtain the benefit of it against other persons besides the shipper. Were it not for the inclusion of these words in the clause the shipowners would not have been able to rely upon it as against any of the claimants in this litigation. (my emphasis)
"113. That brings me to the fourth argument, which is that the complete exemption conferred by part (1) is cut down by Article III.8 of the Hague Rules, which provides that any clause in a contract of carriage relieving "the carrier or the ship" from liability for negligence shall be null and void. I confess that on this point my opinions have fluctuated but in the end I have been persuaded that the reasoning of Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough is correct and that Article III.8 does have this effect.
114. Putting the argument in my own words, it seems to me to run as follows. I do not think that the collateral contract between shipper and independent contractor is a "contract of carriage" so as to attract the application of the Hague Rules. But part (3) says that the independent contractor "shall to this extent be deemed to be parties to the contract contained in or evidenced by this Bill of Lading". That means, as I said earlier, that he is a party only for the purpose of taking the benefit of the exemption clause against the shipper and any transferee of the bill of lading. But, for that purpose only, the provisions of the bill of lading, insofar as they are relevant, apply to him. The only provision which has been suggested as relevant in the present case is Article III.8, which applies by virtue of the paramountcy provision in part (2). That does apply to exemption clauses and restricts their effect."
"205. Such a contract cannot properly be characterised as a contract of carriage. It is rather a contract of exemption which is ancillary or collateral to other contractual arrangements (the time charter and the bill of lading) which were necessary to achieve the carriage of the goods on the chosen vessel. ....
207. Accordingly, I am satisfied that the Himalaya Clause is not itself a contract of carriage of goods by sea, and that merely by taking the benefit of such a Clause the owner or demise charterer of the ship does not become a party to a contract of carriage and so a carrier within the meaning of Article I(a) of the Hague Rules."
"The present case however is factually different, because the act performed to bring any contract into existence between the shipowner and the cargo owners is the carrying of the goods. The question is whether that factual difference gives rise to a legal difference, whether (in short) the resulting contract is properly to be regarded for Hague Rules purposes as a contract of carriage and the shipowner as entering into it with a shipper. I have not found these to be easy questions, but I conclude that to answer them negatively would be to elevate form over substance and to invest what is essentially a legal device with a wholly disproportionate legal significance. If the act performance of which brings a contract into existence between the shipowner and the cargo owners is the carrying of the cargo owners' goods it would seem to me anomalous to give the shipowner the benefit of clause 5 but take no account of article III rule 8 of the Hague Rules which were incorporated into the contract by clause 2 (where they were described as the "BASIS OF CONTRACT"). Thus the shipowner is not protected by an exemption provision invalidated by article III rule 8."
The insurer Defendants' other objections
Mr. Pollock relies of course upon the very existence of the express undertaking in cl. 4(2) and he says "here is a contractual obligation not to make the claim which is being made by the respondents". Accordingly it should follow that the relief which he seeks, namely, the stay of those proceedings, should be granted. I do not think it follows that merely by establishing the contract he ipso facto obtains his relief because the matter is one for the discretion of the Court, but I accept that his ability to point to a clear right being infringed should prima facie entitle him to the relief he claims.
If it was to be established, however, that it was basically an academic exercise, that the breach of the agreement not to sue would involve his clients in no form of possible prejudice, then I think a Court would be reluctant to exercise its discretion and allow such applicants to interfere with a pending action. Mr. Pollock does not however say that this is purely a matter of academic interest, that because his clients have got this undertaking they wish to enforce it just for the joy of seeing their contractual rights are acknowledged, approved and enforced. What he says quite simply is this, that the respondents in this case have sought to sue the haulage company because this is a method, they think, of circumventing the limitation on their remedies to be found in the R.H.A. conditions of haulage. They have not sued the applicants because they would be met as in the past by the applicants setting up the limitation of liability and if they sought to sue the applicants now, the applicants would be able to set up successfully a time bar to those proceedings. Accordingly, the respondents are suing the hauliers. The effect upon the applicants is likely to be that the hauliers will seek under the R.H.A. terms an indemnity from Van Ommeren and that Van Ommeren, having acted throughout as the agents of the applicants, will then seek to be indemnified by the applicants for the consequences of their so acting. In other words, there will be passed up the chain from the hauliers to Van Ommeren and ultimately to the applicants the claim which is now being made.
I think Mr. Pollock is right in his assertion that he can show an interest in the enforcement of the clause of a practical kind because he has established to my satisfaction a real possibility, if the claim is allowed to proceed, of the applicants suffering financial loss. He accordingly can point to a breach of contract which gives him, in my judgment, following the judgment of Lord Justice Salmon in the case of Gore v. Van der Lann [1967] 2W.L.R. 358 , the right to apply. By establishing the real possibility of his clients being prejudiced in the manner I have indicated, he has provided a situation where I think discretion ought to be exercised in his favour.
Conclusion