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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 >> Novologistics Sarl v Five Ocean Corporation the "Merida" [2009] EWHC 3046 (Comm) (27 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/3046.html Cite as: [2009] 2 CLC 896, [2009] EWHC 3046 (Comm), [2010] 1 Lloyd's Rep 274 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
AND IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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NOVOLOGISTICS SARL |
Claimant (Charterers) (Respondent in Arbitration) |
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- and - |
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FIVE OCEAN CORPORATION the "MERIDA" |
Defendant (Owners) (Claimant in Arbitration) |
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Lawrence Akka (instructed by Mays Brown Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 19th November 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Gross :
INTRODUCTION
i) The charterparty was for the carriage of a part cargo of steel plates, from (put neutrally) Xingang to Cadiz and Bilbao.ii) The vessel arrived at Xingang and tendered a Notice of Readiness ("NOR") at 04.00 on Saturday the 10th March, 2007.
iii) The vessel then anchored, awaiting a berth.
iv) A pilot boarded at 17.00 on Friday 30th March and the vessel proceeded to the berth at 17.15; she was "all fast" at 19.50.
v) Loading commenced at 21.25 on the 30th March and was completed at 06.00 on the 31st March.
THE CHARTERPARTY
" one good and safe chrts' berth terminal 4 stevedores Xingang to one good and safe berth Cadiz and one good and safe berth Bilbao
[Interposing here, I shall refer to this term, neutrally, as the "opening term"]
…..
n.o.r./time-counting as per below c/p terms
….
DETAILS TO THE C/P
CLAUSE 2
[1] The vessel to load at one good and safe port/one good and safe charterers' berths Xingang and to discharge at one good and safe port/one good and safe charterers' berth Cadiz and at one good and safe port/one good and safe charterers' berth Bilbao.
[2] Shifting from anchorage/warping along the berth at port of load and at ports of discharge to be for owners' account, while all time used to count as lay time.
….
CLAUSE 4
At port of load and at port discharge notice of readiness to be given and accepted in writing and only during the period from 08.00 hours to 17.00 hours Mondays to Sundays…..
CLAUSE 6
…..At port of load and at ports of discharge time to commence to count at 14.00 hours if written notice of readiness is given during ordinary office hours before noon or at 08.00 hours the next day if written notice of readiness is given during ordinary office hours after noon "
(Note: The numbering of the sub-paragraphs of Cl.2 is added.)
THE AWARD
" 25. We found that Clause 2 clearly provided for a Port charter in that it qualified the wording contained in the terms set out earlier in the recap by referring to both safe ports and berths. Furthermore, Clause 2 provided for shifting time from the anchorage to the berth to count as laytime which we decided must have been on the basis of an ability for the Master to tender a valid NOR upon arrival as indeed occurred. Had this been a Berth charter there would have been no need for such a provision….. "
THE RIVAL CASES
DISCUSSION
" [57] From this line of authority I derive two principles, which I shall apply in this appeal. (1) The court should read an arbitral award as a whole in a fair and reasonable way. The court should not engage in minute textual analysis. (2) Where the arbitrator's experience assists him in determining a question of law, such as the interpretation of contractual documents or correspondence passing between members of his own trade or industry, the court will accord some deference to the arbitrator's decision on that question. The court will only reverse that decision if it is satisfied that the arbitrator, despite the benefit of his relevant experience, has come to the wrong answer."
" (1) The loading voyage, viz. the voyage of the chartered vessel from wherever she is at the date of the charterparty to the place specified in it as the place of loading.
(2) The loading operation, viz. the delivery of the cargo to the vessel at the place of loading and its stowage on board.
(3) The carrying voyage, viz. the voyage of the vessel to the place specified in the charterparty as the place of delivery.
(4) The discharging operation, viz. the delivery of the cargo from the vessel at the place specified in the charterparty as the place of discharge and its receipt there by the charterer or other consignee."
As, with respect, neatly expressed in Schofield, Laytime and Demurrage (5th ed.), at para. 3.3:
"Arrival at the specified destination is the point both geographically and in time when the voyage stages end and the loading/ discharging operations begin. "
Identification of the "specified destination" – whether "berth" or "port" - impacts on the incidence of loss occasioned by delay in loading or discharging, when the delay is due to the place at which the vessel is obliged by the terms of the charterparty to load or discharge her cargo being occupied by other shipping. See further, per Lord Diplock, in The Johanna Oldendorff (supra), at p.555.
i) In Stag Line v Board of Trade (1950) 83 Ll. L. Rep. 356, the charterparty provided that the vessel was to "sail and proceed to one or two safe ports East Canada or Newfoundland, place or places as ordered by charterers and/or shippers or so near thereunto as she may safely get". There was a delay in berthing and owners claimed demurrage. In the course of his judgment (at p. 358), Devlin J observed that the applicable "principle of law" had not been disputed. It was this:" …that if the berth at which the vessel ultimately has to load or discharge is named in the charter-party, she is not an arrived ship until she arrives at the berth, and by named in the charter-party I mean either named in it when originally drafted or named in it by virtue of a power of nomination expressly given by the charter-party. If, on the other hand, there is no power of nomination expressly given so that no berth is named therein, and she proceeds to the berth ordered by the charterers merely by virtue of the implied right which the charterers have to select the loading berth, then she becomes an arrived ship when she arrives at the place then named in the charter-party which is the port."In the event, Devlin J (as he then was) held that this was a berth charterparty and the vessel was not an arrived ship until she reached the nominated berth, so that owners' claim failed.ii) In North River Freighters Ltd v President of India (The Radnor) [1955] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 668, the "Gencon" charterparty provided for the vessel to proceed to "…one safe berth Dairen…and there load a full and complete cargo…". The decision in the case turned, adversely to charterers, on a clause which provided that "Time lost in waiting for berth to count as loading time". That clause apart, both Singleton LJ and Parker LJ expressed the view that this was a berth charterparty. At p.675, Singleton LJ said this:
" …Upon the charter-party, she had to proceed to 'one safe berth Dairen'. She would not reach her destination until she reached her berth…."At p. 680, Parker LJ expressed the matter this way:" No doubt where the charter is in the form 'That the vessel shall proceed to….' a named port 'and there load at one safe berth,' the charter is a port charter. The contractual voyage is to the port, albeit that the owners must obey the charterer's instructions as to the berth nominated by the latter. Here, however, the contractual voyage is not to the port of Dairen, and if necessary I would have held that this is a berth charter…"iii) The Finix [1975] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 415 was also concerned with the true construction of a "time lost" clause. In the course of his judgment, Donaldson J (as he then was) put the present matter as follows (at p.422):
" It is well settled that where the destination is a named berth or there is an express right to nominate a berth, the charter is a berth charter-party, i.e., the ship is not 'arrived' before she reaches the berth. It is also well settled that where the destination is an area of wider extent, but there is an implied right in the charterer to nominate the berth or other discharging spot, the ship is 'arrived' when she reaches the appropriate part of the wider area and not when she later reaches the discharging berth or spot.But there is a realm of uncertainty where the charter-party provides that discharge shall take place at, for example, (a) 'One safe berth, London' or (b) 'London, one safe berth'. The test is undoubtedly whether on the true construction of the charter-party, the destination is London or the berth. My own view is that in case (a) it is the berth and in case (b) it is London. This point arose in The Radnor and Lords Justices Singleton and Parker seem to have inclined to this view."iv) In The Puerto Rocca [1978] 1 Lloyd's Rep 252, at p.255, Mocatta J accepted the submission of Mr. Nicholas Phillips (as he then was) that a charterparty containing the destination "one safe berth Seaforth", was a berth charterparty.
v) In The Isabelle [1982] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 81, Robert Goff J (as he then was) treated it as "plain" from a clause providing for the vessel to proceed with the utmost despatch "…to a berth…as ordered by Charterers in one safe port Algeria…and there load", that the charterparty was a berth charterparty.
i) First, the opening term is in a form which identifies the destination as the berth. See: The Radnor, The Finix and The Puerto Rocca, supra. The specified destination is not Xingang; it is one "good and safe…berth…..Xingang". To my mind, that would by itself suffice to make this a berth charterparty, always assuming that the opening term is not overridden by any other provision/s of the charterparty; but matters do not end there.ii) Secondly, on its true construction, the opening term provides expressly for Charterers to nominate the berth at Xingang. As it seems to me, that express right is given to Charterers by the wording "chrs' berth" in the opening term. On this footing too, the charterparty is a berth charterparty: see, Stag Line v Board of Trade and The Isabelle, supra.
i) The term contained in the opening part of the charterparty, "n.o.r./ time-counting as per below c/p terms" does not assist Owners. It is linked, not to cl. 2 but to cll. 4 and 6 of the charterparty, which, as the arbitrators (rightly) held, are neutral.ii) It is unnecessary to express an opinion on Mr. Coburn's alternative argument, namely that even had cl. 2[1] stood alone, the charterparty would have been a berth charterparty.
iii) Given the variety of matters dealt with in cl.2 of the charterparty – I have only set out extracts from the full clause – there was rightly no suggestion that any conclusion could be drawn as to the true focus of cl. 2[1], based on the matters covered by the clause as a whole.
i) As to the apparent oddity of stipulating for shifting time alone to count in advance of berthing, it is perhaps best not to speculate - though there may be some force in Mr. Coburn's suggestion that the provision is explicable by reference to this being a charterparty for the carriage of a part cargo. At all events, this consideration does not dissuade me from the conclusion I am otherwise minded to reach.ii) I am unable to accept Mr. Akka's submission that cl. 2[2] assumed that laytime had already begun; on this construction "while" simply introduced wording acknowledging that laytime had already begun to count. I do not think so; as it seemed to me, "while" in cl. 2[2] served to distinguish between the different regimes governing (1) the costs and (2) the time of shifting and warping.