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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 >> Exportadora Valle De Colina SA (t/a Exportadora Santa Elena) & Ors v A.P. Moller - Maersk AS (t/a Maersk Line) [2010] EWHC 3224 (Comm) (09 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/3224.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3224 (Comm) |
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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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(1) EXPORTADORA VALLE DE COLINA S.A. trading as EXPORTADORA SANTA ELENA (2) EXPORTADORA SEEDLESS VALLEY S.A. (3) WORLDWIDE GROWERS CHILE S.A. (4) HARS & HAGEBAUER LIMITED (5) EU FRUIT LOGISTICS B.V. |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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A.P. MOLLER – MAERSK A/S trading as MAERSK LINE |
Defendant |
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Timothy Young QC and Josephine Davies (instructed by TLT LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15-17, 21-24 June 2010; 6-8 September 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Flaux:
Background and overview
The relevant provisions of the bills of lading and the applicable legal regime
6. Carrier's Responsibility – Multimodal Transport
6. Where Carriage is Multimodal Transport, ... save as is otherwise provided for in this bill of lading, the Carrier shall be liable for loss or damage occurring during the Carriage only to the extent set out below:
6.1 Where the stage of Carriage where loss or damage occurred is not known:
(a) Exclusions
The Carrier shall be relieved of liability for any loss or damage where such loss or damage was caused by:
(i) an act or omission of the Merchant or Person acting on behalf of the Merchant other than the Carrier, his servant agent or Subcontractor,
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(iii) insufficient or defective condition of packing or marks,
(iv) handling, loading, stowage or unloading of the Goods by the Merchant or any Person acting on his behalf,
(v) inherent vice of the Goods,
(b) Burden of Proof
The burden of proof that the loss or damage was due to one or more of the causes or events specified in this clause 6.1 shall rest upon the Carrier. Save that if the Carrier establishes that in the circumstances of the case, the loss or damage could be attributed to one or more of the causes or events specified in clause 6.1(a)(iii), (iv) or (v), it shall be presumed that it was so caused. The Merchant shall, however, be entitled to prove that the loss or damage was not, in fact, caused either wholly or partly by one or more of these causes or events.
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6.2 Where the stage of Carriage where the loss or damage occurred is known. Notwithstanding anything provided for in clause 6.1 ... the liability of the Carrier in respect of such loss or damage shall be determined:
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(c) by the Hague Rules Articles 1-8 only inclusive ... if the loss or damage is known to have occurred during Carriage by sea;
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7. Compensation and Liability Provisions
7.1 Subject always to the Carrier's right to limit liability as provided for herein, if the Carrier is liable for compensation in respect of loss of or damage to the Goods, such compensation shall be calculated by reference to the invoice value of the Goods plus Freight and Insurance if paid. If there is no invoice value of the goods or if any such invoice is not bona fide, such compensation shall be calculated by reference to the value of such Goods at the place and time they are delivered or should have been delivered to the Merchant. The value of the Goods shall be fixed according to the current market price, by reference to the normal value of goods of the same kind and/or quality
8. General
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8.2 Save as is otherwise provided herein, the Carrier shall under no circumstances be liable for direct or indirect or consequential loss or damage arising from any other cause whatsoever or for loss of profits.
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11. Shipper-packed Containers
If a Container has not been packed by the Carrier:
11.1 This bill of lading shall be a receipt only for such Container;
11.2 The Carrier shall not be liable for loss of or damage to the contents … if such loss of or damage to the contents … has been caused by all matters beyond his control including, inter alia, without prejudice to the generality of this exclusion.
(a) the manner in which the Container has been packed; or
(b) the unsuitability of the Goods for carriage in Containers; or
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(d) the unsuitability or defective condition of the Container provided that, if the Container has been supplied by the Carrier, this unsuitability or defective condition could have been apparent upon reasonable inspection by the Merchant at or prior to the time the Container was packed.
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11.4 The Shipper shall inspect Containers before packing them and the use of Containers shall be prima facie evidence of their being sound and suitable for use
12. Perishable Cargo
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12.2 The Merchant should note that refrigerated Containers are not designed
(a) to freeze down cargo which has not been presented for stuffing at or below its designated carrying temperature and the Carrier shall not be responsible for the consequences of cargo being presented at a higher temperature than that required for the Carriage; nor
12.3 The term "apparent good order and condition" when used in this bill of lading with reference to goods which require refrigeration, ventilation or other specialised attention does not mean that the Goods, when received were verified by the Carrier as being at the carrying temperature humidity level, or other condition designated by the Merchant.
12.4 The Carrier shall not be liable for any loss or damage to the Goods arising from ... stoppage of the refrigerating ... or/any other specialised machinery, plant insulation and or apparatus of the Container vessel or conveyance and any other facilities, provided that the Carrier shall before and at the beginning of the Carriage exercise due diligence to maintain the Container supplied by the Carrier in an efficient state.
13. Inspection of Goods
The Carrier shall be entitled, but under no obligation, to open and/or scan any Package or Container at any time and to inspect the contents. … The Carrier in exercising the liberties contained in this clause shall not be under any obligation to take any particular measures and shall not be liable for any loss, delay or damage howsoever arising from any action or lack of action under this clause.
14. Description of Goods
14.1 This Bill of Lading shall be prima facie evidence of the receipt by the Carrier in apparent good order and condition ... of the total number of Containers or other packages or units indicated in the box entitled "Carrier's Receipt" on the reverse side hereof.
14.2 No representation is made by the Carrier as to the weight, contents, measure, quantity, quality, description, condition, marks, numbers or value of the Goods and the Carrier shall be under no responsibility whatsoever in respect of such description or particulars.
Condition of grapes on shipment
"...we have all the packing list in front of us, actually in the computer and with a projector, and we review different factors, and we make the decision of loading or not loading fruit that is carrying some -- fruit that can be not absolutely normal. We analyse that and for me the authorisation of loading pallets of more than ten days is every Wednesday in that meeting, that is a regular meeting, which is not in the manual, where the commercial area allows to load the pallets who needs to make a special decision."
"....this area I know very well, the pallets stay a small period of time, while it is located into a container, and it has absolutely nothing wrong, and these fruit represent what normally is done in Chile, a hundred million boxes in Chile are loaded this way, a hundred million boxes are loaded exactly the same way, and there is not any injury or damage reported by having, let's say, ten minutes or whatever amount of time the fruit there, you know.
Actually, I would like to add that Chile loads more than 90 per cent of the fruit and grapes in open vessels, yes, in conventional vessels, and the system is that you carry the fruit in a truck, not in a container to the port, you open the truck, you take the pallet, and you move the pallet into the vessel, it's exactly probably two or three more times than this operation, yes, and it's something absolutely normal that has been done all the years and all the fruit suffered the same procedure."
Damage on outturn
"One of my tasks is to ascertain whether the grape is suitable for storage under the marketing arrangements and strategy that we as a company have. So I would look at containers and you would see a slight dulling, the berries would have lost their lustre, a little bit of their lustre and the stems may be slightly dehydrated, going a sort of khaki colour and the bunches may have slumped in the box. It is very difficult to explain, but they may only have dropped a quarter of an inch or so, but they looked a little bit slightly older and as -- I would then -- if I saw anything like that, I would explain to Michelle and Sebastian, who were the QC people employed by Santa Elena in Europe, that I thought there would be -- there may be an issue with that container."
"Q. They gave the appearance of grapes that had been a long time off the vine, would that be fair?
A. No, they gave the appearance of grapes that – in previous seasons, grapes that we had cut and harvested earlier and had been stored in Chile and then shipped later had arrived looking very good. If you put a good grape in and it is kept the right temperature, kept correctly, then you should expect a good grape out. What a cold store isn't is a hospital and when you put the good grape in the container, in my view, if it is kept at under 1 degree, about anywhere between 31 and 33 -- which is old money -- but they are, I believe, the best temperatures for transporting grapes, then when it comes out the other end it will still have a good life. If that suffers some form of distress and abuse on that journey, however it is caused, then when it comes out the shelf life is reduced and that is in my view what we saw with that year."
Q. One of the problems that we have in this case –well I say "we", being the defendants -- is trying to distinguish between those grapes which were simply apparently subjected to a high temperature but had no manifested effect upon their order and condition upon out-turn, and those where there was an apparent temperature problem and a manifested condition on out-turn, do you see the issue?
A. I think, first of all, everything that had a high temperature had a problem.
Q. Now, forgive me, everything at a high temperature had a problem, is that because -- the mere fact that there had been a high temperature was the problem?
A. I would say, yes.
Q. I see. And that's a high temperature only as of theTempTale reading?
A. Well, that is what we would be guided by, to start with.
Q. I see.
A. We would then obviously inspect the produce, but the thing that we could not get away from was delivering produce to the customers, within a few days we had a massive problem, the problem got progressive, the marketing side of the problem got progressive, because we put a lot of pressure on people for the highest possible price we could get, and then they wouldn't take -- or they would take the produce again but we had to market it in a very, very, very weakened condition.
......
Q. As the season wore on, you had seen problems emerging, which seemed to be related to high temperatures on the TempTales.
A. That's correct.
Q. And gradually, as the season wore on, as soon as you had a high TempTale reading, then you thought: oh no, not again, we'd better treat these grapes as if they are about to go off.
A. No. It doesn't work like that, anyway, because if you are trying to sell produce to somebody, you say, "this fruit is a problem parcel", people don't want this any more.
Q. I'm not saying that you should tell them there was a problem parcel.
A. Our mindset wasn't like that, because every time we started on it, we tried as best we could to get the price up, reorganise it. There's only 10 per cent of the market that we said which is non-supermarket. Of that 10 per cent, there's probably a quarter per cent that wants poor produce.
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A. Well, the chain of events would be these [Ms Steenkamp and Mr Fresno] would be the first people to look at it. They would tell us if there were high temperatures; because we are representing their company it is better for us to know and be aware. Would that affect our initial marketing? No. Mr Parkin looked at the fruit and, in all honesty Mr Parkin thought that they might even be wrong on this. Not the actual TempTales, but he said there's not really a lot wrong with it, slight problems, and we was extremely surprised at the rapid deterioration. And that set the tone for the season: not mindset, the tone.
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Q. So far as you were concerned then, the cargoes were not distressed, as such, merely by virtue of the high temperatures being recorded on the TempTales. Is that right?
A. Any fruit that arrives at high temperature is distressed.
Q. Right. When you say any fruit which arrives at a high temperature is distressed, what about any fruit arriving with a high TempTale reading is treated as distressed?
A. No, I said the fruit is distressed, not we treat it as distressed.
Q. Fine. You see, there's a difference between a high temperature reading, a high temperature of a cargo as it's unloaded, it's at something in excess of 4 degrees Fahrenheit, say, then you can say that's above the appropriate transport temperature and it's distressed. What I'm asking about is, if fruit arrives in apparent good order and condition, but there is a high TempTale reading that Miss Steemkamp or Mr Fresno has told you about, is that container then treated as distressed for these purposes?
A. No, it's not treated as distressed.
Q. Is it distressed?
A. High temperature produce is distressed.
"The thing is, once the pallet came out of the cold store, which was running at between 31 and 33 degrees, all of a sudden you get that change of air and you give it plenty of oxygen, and it is just going to go "whoopee", right? The thing is if we supply to someone like a multiple, they have a best before of three days or even four days at that time of the year, plus the fact they also, sort of an unwritten rule in their things, is that you are going to give the customer a couple of days, because it is not like a punnet, where you buy your punnet and it has "display until the 22nd, best before the 25th". This is a bag of grapes. You give it to the supermarket, they then have three days to sell it. Within that three days that grape has deteriorated. If we had supplied that to one of our customers who had then supplied it on to the multiple, it had gone into the multiple and it had died on the shelf within the three days, they would have received the most almighty rollicking. The fruit would have been recalled from the shelf and there would have been a huge fight levelled at someone."
"the grapes…being attacked by moulds and rot to various degrees and the general quality/condition of the grapes was varying considerably from one box to a neighbouring box in one end and the same pallet…. Due to above noted very uneven and to a large extent poor condition of the examined grapes the said grapes had lost a considerable part of its expected remaining storage/shelf life hence to mitigate the loss as much as possible it was deemed necessary by Everfresh to have all the shipments marketed as soon as possible. In order to successfully do that the price would have to be considerably reduced."
"Examination of a significant number of cartons, disclosed the condition of the grapes to be moderate and overall weak and dangerous. With both varieties [Sugarone and Flame] the condition of the claimed pallets was fairly similar, viz inspections revealed that fruit was reasonable in quality but weakened by the consistent presence of decay, consistency, shatter, stem necrosis etc."
The cause of the damage
"This protection allows for the fruit to remain for a longer period of time than in unprotected fruit conditions without having dehydration problems, since the packaging materials produce a micro-environment effect of high relative humidity in conjunction with the sulphur dioxide pad".
"Q. Yes, did you discern any difference within containers as to pallets that had been close to the refrigeration machinery, for example, as opposed to those which had been near the doors? Did you notice any difference in the condition that you saw?
A. In some of the containers, yes.
Q. In some, but not all?
A. Not all, no.
Q. In some there was a uniform –
A. Degradation.
Q. Degradation, as you saw it. I suppose you don't remember -- no, of course you don't remember which ones --
A. No."
"If the overall cargo temperature was reflected by the customer loggers, then we would expect to detect patterns of deteriorated cargo more prevalent towards the doors. This was not the case despite the temperature variation caused by the loading plan. A more likely explanation is inherent vice and consequent weakness in the grape."
Problems related to the containers and their carriage
Power offs
"Off power must be kept at a minimum as temperature fluctuations can have an impact on the product quality. Therefore when reefers are handled at terminal (or on board a vessel) it is of the utmost importance that reefers are plugged in immediately and disconnected as late as possible before being handled. This can only be achieved by close communication between the vessel and the terminal...
Please find below the maximum allowable off power time for various reefer cargoes:
Cold Treatment, Controlled Atmosphere, Super Freezer, Chilled meat and special shipments off power periods should not exceed 1 hour.
Chilled cargo: Less than 3 hours.
Frozen cargo: Less than 8 hours."
Quantum
Conclusion