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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 >> AP Moller-Maersk A/S (t/a "Maersk Line") v Sonaec Villas Cen Sad Fadoul & Ors [2010] EWHC 355 (Comm) (26 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/355.html Cite as: [2010] Bus LR D97, [2010] EWHC 355 (Comm), [2010] ILPr 32 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
A.P. MOLLER-MAERSK A/S (trading as "Maersk Line") |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SONAEC VILLAS CEN SAD FADOUL (2) SONAEC SA (also known as "Societe SONAEC") (3) ZOUHAIR MICHEL FADOUL |
Defendants |
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Hearing dates: 19 February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE :
"In all other cases, this bill of lading shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law and all disputes arising hereunder shall be determined by the English High Court of Justice in London to the exclusion of the courts of another country".
The Chinese proceedings
"It is alleged by [High Goal] that the cargoes were booked by B & D Company to ship. [High Goal] then booked with Maersk (China) Shipping Co Ltd to ship the cargoes. B & D Company paid the ocean freight in full. There is no relationship between Yekalon and [High Goal], neither is there any relationship between Yekalon and Maersk (China) Shipping Co Ltd, or their agent. [High Goal] shall deliver the B/L to B & D Company.
"According to the prima facie evidence provided by Yekalon, Yekalon is the owner and shipper of the cargoes. The carriers have already issued the B/L, which is under the control and custody of [High Goal]. And [High Goal] also confirmed in their application form that Yekalon is one of the shippers. Yekalon is entitled to have the B/L. It is proper for Yekalon to ask for delivery of the B/L from [High Goal]
I do not have the evidence referred to before me.
i. Insofar as Sonaec claimed any rights under the First Bill, such claim fell within the exclusive jurisdiction clause in the First Bill; bringing proceedings in Benin was in breach of that exclusive jurisdiction clause; and
ii. Any rights which Sonaec had had under the First Bill had in any event been brought to an end when the First Bill had been cancelled by the rightful shipper, Yekalon, and replaced.
"1. Shipping documents etc to which Act applies
(1) This Act applies to the following documents, that is to say–
(a) any bill of lading;
(b) any sea waybill; and
(c) …
(2) References in this Act to a bill of lading–
(a) do not include references to a document which is incapable of transfer either by indorsement or, as a bearer bill, by delivery without indorsement; but
(b) …
(3) References in this Act to a sea waybill are references to any document which is not a bill of lading but–
(a) is such a receipt for goods as contains or evidences a contract for the carriage of goods by sea; and
(b) identifies the person to whom delivery of the goods is to be made by the carrier in accordance with that contract.
2 Rights under shipping documents
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, a person who becomes–
(a) the lawful holder of a bill of lading;
(b) the person who (without being an original party to the contract of carriage) is the person to whom delivery of the goods to which a sea waybill relates is to be made by the carrier in accordance with that contract; or
(c) …
shall (by virtue of becoming the holder of the bill or, as the case may be, the person to whom delivery is to be made) have transferred to and vested in him all rights of suit under the contract of carriage as if he had been a party to that contract.
(5) Where rights are transferred by virtue of the operation of subsection (1) above in relation to any document, the transfer for which that subsection provides shall extinguish any entitlement to those rights which derives–
(a) where that document is a bill of lading, from a person´s having been an original party to the contract of carriage; or
(b) in the case of any document to which this Act applies, from the previous operation of that subsection in relation to that document;
but the operation of that subsection shall be without prejudice to any rights which derive from a person´s having been an original party to the contract contained in, or evidenced by, a sea waybill...
Second declaration
Maersk's submissions
"8-013: Rights of original shipper. Section 2(1) refers to rights of suit being "transferred" to the person to whom delivery is to be made under a sea waybill. If full force were given to the word "transferred", then A (the shipper) would lose his rights under the contract of carriage when C (the consignee) acquired such rights; and since in our example the contract contained in or evidenced by the sea waybill from its inception provided for delivery to C, it might seem at first sight to follow that A lost his rights under the contract as soon as it was made. Quite apart from the logical difficulty of such a concept, the reasoning would also give rise to the practically undesirable consequence of depriving A of the rights which a shipper has at common law of redirecting the goods; and we have seen that the Act is intended to preserve and does preserve this right. It does so by providing in s.2(5) that the operation of s.2(1) "shall be without prejudice to any rights which derive from a person's having been an original party to the contract contained in, or evidenced by, a sea waybill......
8-014: Change in consignee. Where goods are shipped by A in B's ship under a sea waybill naming C as consignee, A may exercise his power to redirect the goods by substituting D for C as consignee. Where A does this, C ceases to be, and D becomes, "the person to whom delivery.... is to be made by the carrier" so that rights under the contract of carriage are vested in D by virtue of s.2(1) and any rights which were previously vested in C become extinct under s.2(5)....".
"It is clear that the main advantage of sea waybills and straight bills is that rights of suit against C [Carrier] can travel from S [Shipper] to B [Buyer/Consignee] without physical transfer of the sea waybill of the straight bill of lading by S to B. There are, however, three possible consequences of the use of such documents which need to be weighed up against this advantage. First, because B's rights of suit against C depend exclusively on its being named as consignee on the document, those rights of suit vanish as soon as B stops being named as consignee – and S can, so far as concerns its contracts of carriage with C, name another person as consignee at any time until the goods are discharged: B's rights of suit against C are consequently precarious in that S can deprive B of such rights through the simple expedient of giving alternative delivery instructions to C.... "
Conclusion
Note 1 Societé Nouvelle d’Automobile d’Equipment et de Commerce [Back] Note 2 The letter of credit called for bills of lading marked “freight collect” whereas the First Bill appear to have been freight prepaid.
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