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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 >> Lansat Shipping Co Ltd v Glencore Grain BV [2009] EWHC 551 (Comm) (25 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/551.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 551 (Comm), [2009] 2 All ER (Comm) 12, [2009] 1 Lloyd's Rep 658, [2009] 1 CLC 379 |
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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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LANSAT SHIPPING CO LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GLENCORE GRAIN BV |
Respondent |
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Mr Simon Birt (instructed by Birketts LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 23rd February 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blair:
"The Charterers hereby undertake the obligation/responsibility to make thorough investigations and every arrangement in order to ensure that the last voyage of this Charter will in no way exceed the maximum period under this Charter Party. If, however, Charterers fail to comply with this obligation and the last voyage will exceed the maximum period, should the market rise above the Charter Party rate in the meantime, it is hereby agreed that the charter hire will be adjusted to reflect the prevailing market level from the 30th day prior to the maximum period [d]ate until actual redelivery of the vessel to the Owners."
An illegitimate last voyage
"My Lords, in merchant shipping time is money. A cargo ship is expensive to finance and expensive to run. The shipowner must keep it earning with the minimum of gaps between employments. Time is also important for the charterer, because arrangements must be made for the shipment and receipt of the cargo, or for the performance of obligations under subcontracts. These demands encourage the planning and performance of voyages to the tightest of margins. Yet even today ships do not run precisely to time. The most prudent schedule may be disrupted by regular hazards such as adverse weather or delays in port happening in an unexpected manner or degree, or by the intervention of wholly adventitious events.
Where the charterparty is for a period of time rather than a voyage, and the remuneration is calculated according to the time used rather than the service performed, the risk of delay is primarily on the charterer. For the shipowner, so long as he commits no breach and nothing puts the ship off-hire, his right to remuneration is unaffected by a disturbance of the charterer's plans. It is for the latter to choose between cautious planning, which may leave gaps between employments, and bolder scheduling with the risk of setting aims which cannot be realised in practice.
This distribution of risk holds good during for most of the chartered service. As the time for redelivery approaches things become more complicated. (The word "redelivery" is inaccurate, but it is convenient, and I will use it). If the market is rising, the charterer wants to have the use of the vessel at the chartered rate for as long as possible. Conversely, the shipowner must think ahead to the next employment, and if as is common he has made a forward fixture he will be in difficulties if the vessel is retained by the charterer longer than had been foreseen. This conflict of interest becomes particularly acute when there is time left for only one more voyage before the expiry of the charter, and disputes may arise if the charterer orders the ship to perform a service which the shipowner believes will extend beyond the date fixed for redelivery."
"…the charterer gives orders for the employment of the vessel which cannot reasonably be expected to be performed by the final terminal date [that is, the date by which the charterer is contractually obliged to redeliver the vessel]. He is therefore seeking to avail himself of the services of the vessel at a time when the owner had never agreed to render such services. It is accordingly an order which the charterer is not entitled to give … and in giving it the charterer commits a breach of contract (perhaps a repudiatory breach but that we need not decide). The owner need not comply with such an order because he never agreed to do so. Alternatively, he may comply with the order although not bound to do so: if he does comply, he is entitled to payment of hire at the charterparty rate until redelivery of the vessel and (provided he does not waive the charterer's breach) to damages (being the difference between the charter rate and the market rate if the market rate is higher than the charter rate) for the period between the final terminal date and redelivery. In the further alternative, if (which we do not decide) the charterer's breach is repudiatory, the owner may accept the repudiation, treat the charter as at an end and claim damages. … the charterer's order is illegitimate because he was not contractually entitled to give it, and the voyage (whether performed or not) is stigmatised as illegitimate because it is one the charterer could not under the charter-party lawfully require the owner to perform."
"If the charterer sends the vessel on an illegitimate last voyage—that is, a voyage which it cannot be expected to complete within the charter period, then the shipowner is entitled to refuse that direction and call for another direction for a legitimate last voyage. If the charterer refuses to give it, the shipowner can accept his conduct as a breach going to the root of the contract, fix a fresh charter for the vessel, and sue for damages. If the shipowner accepts the direction and goes on the illegitimate last voyage, he is entitled to be paid—for the excess period—at the current market rate, and not at the charter rate … The hire will be payable at the charter rate up to the end of the charter period, and at the current market rate for the excess period thereafter."
"…where the owners undertook the illegitimate last voyage without waiving their rights to claim damages, the charterers' obligation is to pay the charter rate until the last permissible date for redelivery, and thereafter pay the market rate until the actual redelivery. … In awarding compensation for breach of contract various interests may have to be considered, such as expectation, reliance and restitution. Here the relevant interest is the owners' expectation interest. That expectation was always to receive no more than the charter-party rate until April 14 if the charterers availed themselves of the optional tolerance. To award the owners a higher market rate for the period up to April 14 is to confer on them an unwarranted windfall."
The tribunal's award
The law as to penalties
"…whether a provision is to be treated as a penalty is a matter of construction to be resolved by asking whether at the time the contract was entered into the predominant contractual function of the provision was to deter a party from breaking the contract or to compensate the innocent party for breach. That the contractual function is deterrent rather than compensatory can be deduced by comparing the amount that would be payable on breach with the loss that might be sustained if breach occurred." (Lordsvale Finance plc v Bank of Zambia [1996] QB 752 at 762H, per Colman J).
This was described by Mance LJ as "a more accessible paraphrase of the concept of penalty" in Cine Bes Filmcilik v United International Pictures [2003] EWCA Civ 1669 at [13]. See also The Office of Fair Trading v Abbey National Plc [2008] EWHC 875 (Comm) at [295] and following, per Andrew Smith J.
The parties' contentions
"Except possibly in the case of situations where one of the parties to the contract is able to dominate the other as to the choice of the terms of a contract, it will normally be insufficient to establish that a provision is objectionably penal to identify situations where the application of the provision could result in a larger sum being recovered by the injured party than his actual loss. Even in such situations so long as the sum payable in the event of non-compliance with the contract is not extravagant, having regard to the range of losses that it could reasonably be anticipated it would have to cover at the time the contract was made, it can still be a genuine pre-estimate of the loss that would be suffered and so a perfectly valid liquidated damages provision."
So although the Owners are correct to submit that the comparison is to be made with the upper end of the range of the loss which may be suffered, the pre-estimate must nevertheless be a genuine pre-estimate of recoverable loss for the breach of contract in question. The fact that in broad terms the potential loss of the injured party may be considered different and greater is not in point if such loss is irrecoverable in law.
Discussion and conclusions
"Failure to comply with the obligation there referred to would simply mean that the vessel was redelivered beyond the maximum contractual redelivery date. The loss to which the Owners refer is, to our minds, something quite different. It assumes that the Charterers give an illegitimate order for the last voyage. This is then refused by the Owners, but the Charterers persist in that order so that they put themselves in repudiatory breach of the Charterparty. The Owners could then accept that repudiatory breach. However, it is not the consequence of the Charterers giving orders for an illegitimate last voyage that the Owners would be entitled to have their vessel back and to trade her in the market: they could only achieve that if the Charterers repudiated the charter party. If the Charterers had given orders for an illegitimate last voyage, the Owners could have refused those orders and it would then be for the Charterers to give lawful orders for a voyage which would be concluded within the contractual period. It would only be if the Charterers persisted in orders for an illegitimate last voyage that the question of repudiation would arise." (Award para 22).
"It is thought that, strictly, the owners' damages claim can be formulated both as a claim for damages caused by the illegitimate order and as one for damages for failure to redeliver timeously, but in practice the two claims are likely to be indistinguishable."
In my view, this is a correct statement of the law. It is consistent with the rules as to what loss is recoverable by the owners in this type of situation, which I shall not repeat.