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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 >> Union Marine Classification Services LLC v The Government of the Union of Comoros [2015] EWHC 508 (Comm) (06 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/508.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 508 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
UNION MARINE CLASSIFICATION SERVICES LLC |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNION OF COMOROS |
Defendant |
____________________
MR RICHARD JACOBS QC and MR JOHN ROBB (instructed by Clyde & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26 February 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eder:
Introduction
The (original) Award
i) Paragraphs 1-34 contain certain introductory material and set out the background.
ii) Under the heading "The issues", paragraphs 34-35 state as follows:
"34. Counsel for Union Marine said that (leaving on one side the question of the validity of the arbitration agreement) the following issues arose, and it seems to me that the summary is a fair one:
1. Did the Government validly terminate the Agreement on 17th April 2012?
2. Did the government breach the Agreement? If the termination notice was invalid, the Government plainly did so, but there was a separate question whether it had also done so by its conduct from January 2011.
3. If the government breached the Agreement, what damages is Union Marine entitled to as a result? If Union Marine breached the agreement, what damages is the Government entitled to as a result?
35. I directed that the quantum of the Government's counterclaim should be deferred until after the question of liability had been determined. The claim by Union Marine, for some $3.9 million by way of alleged losses over the life of the agreement, was however for determination at the hearing."
iii) Following certain general comments which are not directly relevant and under the heading "The claims and counterclaims", paragraphs 52-53 state as follows:
"52. Union Marine claimed damages for what they said was the wrongful termination by the government in April 2012 of the Agreement. They also claimed damages for breach by the government of the arbitration clause in relation to the commencement and pursuit of the proceedings in Ajman. They further claimed damages on the basis that the government was in breach by appointing Mr Fahim and setting up the NTA, the argument being that by so doing the Government appointed someone else to perform the acts and functions of the Maritime Administration which were granted exclusively to Union Marine under the Agreement, and that there was an implied term that the Government would not interfere with or prevent them from exercising their powers or performing their obligations under the Agreement.
53. For its part, the government denied liability and counterclaimed damages for what it said were repudiatory breaches of contract by Union Marine."
iv) Following two further paragraphs dealing with matters which are not directly relevant, there is a long section in the Award under the heading "Was termination justified?" This starts with paragraph 58 which states:
"58. I examine here the grounds on which the Government said it was entitled to terminate the Agreement."
This is then followed by a number of sub-sections, the first of which is headed "Shortfall in payments". At the beginning of this sub-section, paragraph 59 states:
"59. The essence of the Government's case in this respect was, as Counsel for Union Marine pointed out, the question whether the latter had fraudulently declared its income from the Registry business. I accept very cogent evidence to support the Government's case would be needed if I were to be satisfied as to this, given the seriousness of the allegation."
After a number of paragraphs where the Arbitrator considers the facts and makes certain findings, his overall conclusion in this sub-section is set out in paragraph 72 as follows:
"72. Against this background, and particularly bearing in mind again that very cogent evidence would be required to justify me in accepting a serious allegation such as was made against [UM], I am unable to find that, on the balance of probabilities, [UM] did not meet their payment obligations under the Agreement. This does not mean that my conclusion is that they did fulfil those obligations: as the parties' lawyers at least will appreciate, I would have had to be persuaded that it was more likely than not that [UM] were in breach ("the balance of probabilities"), and the evidence is not sufficiently weighty to enable me to come to that conclusion. Moreover, I am far from persuaded that there was here any case of bribery."
v) Following further sub-sections which are not directly relevant for present purposes, there is a section under the heading "Conclusion on breaches by Union Marine" which states in material part as follows:
"92. For the above reasons I have come to the conclusion that the Government has failed to show a sufficiently serious breach or breaches by Union Marine of the Agreement to justify it in terminating as it did in April 2010 ...
94 In the result my conclusion is clearly that the Government was not entitled to terminate the Agreement, and accordingly that it was in fact the Government which was in repudiatory breach itself ..."
vi) There is then a section under the heading "Damages" which is not directly relevant save that I note in passing the following comments and conclusion of the Arbitrator in paragraphs 97 and 99:
"97 ... Further, just as there was no sufficiently solid evidence to shown that [UM] had not paid all that was due to the Government (see paragraphs 60-68 above), there was no adequate evidence to show what they had in fact earned
99 All in all, and always on a balance of probabilities, I am not able safely to conclude that [UM] suffered any loss as a result of the Government's wrongful termination of the Agreement. Accordingly, their claim has to fail."
vii) The Award concludes as follows:
"I THEREFORE AWARD, DECLARE AND ADJUDGE that Union Marine's claims and the Government's counterclaims referred to me all fail and I reserve to myself jurisdiction to determine liability for the costs of the reference, including the costs of this award as separately notified to the parties, and to make a further award or award in respect thereof."
Subsequent events
"(a) In addition to the powers set out in section 57 of the Act, the tribunal shall have the following powers to correct an award or to make an additional award:
(i) The tribunal may on its own initiative or on the application of a party correct any accidental mistake, omission or error of calculation in its award.
(ii) The tribunal may on the application of a party give an explanation of a specific point or part of the award."
S57(3) of the 1996 Act provides:
"(3) The tribunal may on its own initiative or on the application of a party
(a) correct an award so as to remove any clerical mistake or error arising from an accidental slip or omission or clarify or remove any ambiguity in the award, or
(b) make an additional award in respect of any claim (including a claim for interest or costs) which was presented to the tribunal but was not dealt with in the award."
"Government's First Application: $11,000pm Minimum Monthly Payments
The Government submitted (DCC §31; Government's Skeleton §57 and Appendix 1; Transcript Day 3 pp. 124-126) that Union Marine failed to pay the minimum $11,000 per month required by Article 4 of the Contract. It was apparently common ground that there was a falling off in payments during and after 2011: see Transcript Day 1 p.57 and Union Marine supplemental Closing Submissions §8.2.
It appears that the Tribunal has omitted to decide this issue in the Award; although we believe that it follows from the Tribunal's conclusions at §96 and indeed at §§97-99 that Union Marine had no justification for not making payments. Accordingly, the government applies either for correction of an accidental omission under paragraph 25(a)(i) or for an explanation under paragraph 25(a)(ii) of the LMAA Terms as to the Tribunal's conclusions in answer to the following questions:
1. Did Union Marine cease making payments after August 2011?
2. If so, was this a breach by Union Marine of Article 4 of the Contract?
3. If so, did Union Marine remain in breach of Article 4 of the Contract until 17 April 2012?
4. Was this a failure by Union Marine to carry out its obligations for the purposes of Article 7 of the Contract, thereby justifying termination of the Contract by the Government on 17 April 2012?
5. If so, is the Government entitled to damages pursuant to Paragraph 76 of the Counterclaim, for failure to pay the minimum $11,000 per month between September 2011 and April 2012?"
" The Tribunal found (§72) that the Government failed to establish that [UM] had breached its obligation to pay 50% of its income to the Government pursuant to Article 4 of the Contract. However, it does not appear to have determined the separate question of whether [UM] was liable to account to the Government as pleaded We therefore request clarification as to whether or not the Tribunal intended to dismiss the Government's claim for an account, and if so why "
The Amended Award and Reasons
"6. I hold, by way of addition and/or correction to paragraph 72 of my original award, that Union Marine ceased making the minimum $11,000 monthly payments under Article 4 of the contract after August 2011, that this was a breach of that Article and that Union Marine continued to be in breach in this respect until 17 April 2012. I do not, however, consider that this entitled the Government to terminate the contract as it did on that date, but it is entitled to damages for this breach, to be assessed.
7. I further hold, again by way of addition and/or correction to my original award, that the Government is entitled to an account as sought in paragraph 77, 77.1 and 77.2 of its Counterclaim, and to damages as claimed in paragraph 77.3 thereof.
8. Accordingly the dispositive paragraph following paragraph 100 of my award is to be amended to read:
I THEREFORE AWARD, DECLARE AND ADJUDGE that Union Marine's claims fail and that the Government's counterclaims referred to me fail, save that the Government is entitled to:
(i) an account of all "taxes charged per vessel for its registration and other income generated by the registration" received by Union Marine between 15 February 2007 and 17 April 2012, and
(ii) an account of all payments transferred by Union Marine to the bank account of the Government in accordance with Article 5 of the contract, and
(iii) damages being the difference between (a) 50% of the total calculated under (i) above and (b) the total calculated under (ii) above, and
(iv) damages to be assessed for Union Marine's failure to pay the minimum $11,000 monthly payments under Article 4 of the contract after August 2011 "
i) "2 the Government was on much firmer ground, because the applications they made were in relation to matters that, I must confess, I had inadvertently not dealt with "
ii) "4 Even if the matter [of non-payment of $11,000 per month] was not pressed forcefully, it was on the table, I omitted to deal with it and it is right that I should do so now."
iii) "5 this (and the Government's other application) plainly relate to a "claim which was presented to the tribunal but was not dealt with in the award."
iv) "6 I failed to deal with either [sic] the $11,000 issue just as I failed to deal with the claim for an account."
v) "10 I am not making a further award or dealing with anything that was not pleaded and addressed at the hearing: I am making corrections and additions to my award to deal with points that were incorrect in the award or which had been raised but not dealt with there."
vi) "13. I turn now to deal with Union Marine's submissions of 29 August 2012 (see paragraph 6 above). They said I have no jurisdiction under s57 to deal with the claim for an account because it was not made at all at the hearing, unsurprisingly (they said) because the issue an account would determine would be the same as that I determined at the hearing, namely whether there was a payment breach by Union Marine. This premise is false: I did not determine that there had been no payment breach at all, though paragraph 72 of the award may read that way. But that was due to an error on my part in overlooking the claim concerning the $11,000 per month minimum, which I am here correcting.
14. The fact is that, as the skeletons, transcripts, written closings and my award all show, attention was focused almost entirely during the hearing on matters related essentially to the question whether Union Marine were in repudiatory breach or not, and there was little, if any, focus on the matters the subject of the present document. But they remained in issue, and any failure on the part of those representing the Government to highlight them cannot mean that they were given up or that I should not or can not deal with them.
15. The argument that the issue of "payment breach" had been determined in truth lay at the heart of Union Marine's 29 August submissions. It was suggested that an order for an account would appear to result in a number of issues (though it was not clear precisely what those issues are) having to be argued, heard and determined all over again. I am afraid I simply do not see that.
16. It was also suggested that an account might lead to inconsistent awards, because if it results in substantial sums being found due, this might be inconsistent with my conclusion that the Government had failed to show a breach or breaches justifying termination. That seems to me an extremely unlikely possibility, but in any event my conclusion has been reached and, subject to any review by the Court, must surely now be immutable."
UM's submissions
"67(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may apply to the court (a) challenging any award of the arbitral tribunal as to its substantive jurisdiction or (b) for an order declaring an award made by the tribunal on the merits to be of no effect, in whole or in part, because the tribunal did not have substantive jurisdiction."
i) The power (and power under the s57(3)(a) slip rule) is not "intended to enable the arbitrator to change his mind on any matter which has been decided by the award, and attempts to use the section for this purpose should be firmly resisted": Mustill and Boyd, 2001 Companion at p.340-341, approved in Al-Hadha v Tradigrain [2002] 2 Lloyd's Rep 512 at [66] and Torch Offshore v Cable Shipping [2004] 2 All ER (Comm) 365 at [26] per Cooke J..
ii) As stated in Torch Offshore v Cable Shipping [2004] 2 All ER (Comm) 365 at [27] per Cooke J, where an arbitrator had rejected a claim for rescission for misrepresentation but it was said to be unclear whether he had considered the issue of inducement in relation to one of the alleged misrepresentations:
"s.57(3)(b), which uses the word 'claim', only applies to a claim which has been presented to a tribunal but has not been dealt with, as opposed to an issue which remains undetermined as part of a claim the terms of s 57(3)(b) are apt to refer to a head of claim for damages or some other remedy (including specifically claims for interest or costs) but not to an issue which is part of the process by which a decision is arrived at on one of those claims. As counsel for Torch pointed out, Torch had claimed rescission and that claim had been rejected by the arbitrator. He could not change his award on that point and there was no room for an application for him to decide that claim, even if he had failed to decide whether there was inducement "
iii) Similarly, as stated in World Trade Corporation v. Czarnikow [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 422 at [14] per Colman J:
"An argument that by reason of the tribunal's making no mention of certain evidence relied on by a party as supporting a relevant finding of fact, there has been a failure to deal with a "claim" would be untenable. The word "claim" in that context does not mean a submission in support of a relevant question of fact. It means a claim for relief by way of damages, declaration or otherwise, such as would have to be pleaded."
iv) As regards whether a claim has been "dealt with" in an award, as stated in Cadogan v Turner [2013] 1 Lloyd's Rep 630 at [43] per Hamblen J:
"A claim is "dealt with" in an award if it has been finally determined by it. Although the dispositive part of the award is likely to be the most important part of the award for the purposes of considering that issue, where, as is almost invariably the case, the written reasons form part of the award, the whole of the award needs to be considered, and the dispositive part of the award considered in the context of the written reasons."
v) However, the tribunal does not have to set out each step by which it reaches its conclusion or deal with each point made by a party; it may deal with issues in a composite way; and the approach of the court is to read the award in a reasonable and commercial way; which may involve taking into account the parties' submissions, since often awards respond to parties' submissions and are not to be interpreted in a vacuum: Petrochemical v The Dow Chemical Company [2012] 2 Lloyd's Rep 691 at [26]).
vi) The fact that a claim may have been dealt with incorrectly or without giving reasons does not mean that it has not been "dealt with"; it is in those cases where the award expresses no conclusions as to a specific claim that it has not been dealt with: Margulead v Excide [2004] 2 All ER 727 at [43].
i) By order and/or agreement the question whether there was a "payment breach" fell to be determined at the hearing;
ii) The question whether there was a payment breach was therefore the subject of disclosure, extensive cross examination and extensive submissions at and after the substantive hearing by way of opening submissions, oral submissions and post hearing written submissions;
iii) Paragraph 72 of the Award states expressly that the Governnment had, in effect, failed to establish that there had been a payment breach; and the final dispositive paragraph of the Award states expressly: " .the Government's counterclaims referred to me all fail".
A threshold point
i) It is wrong to say that the Amended Award is a "nullity". On the contrary, the Amended Award is, on its face, a valid award unless and until it is set aside by the court.
ii) S67 enables a party to apply to the court to challenge an arbitral tribunal's award on the grounds that the tribunal has/had no "substantive jurisdiction".
iii) This expression is defined in s82(1) of the 1996 Act by reference back to s30(1)(a)-(c) of the 1996 Act viz:
""substantive jurisdiction", in relation to an arbitral tribunal, refers to the matters specified in section 30(1)(a) to (c), and references to the tribunal exceeding its substantive jurisdiction shall be construed accordingly."
iv) The matters specified in S30(1) are:
"(a) whether there is a valid arbitration agreement,
(b) whether the tribunal is properly constituted, and
(c) what matters have been submitted to arbitration in accordance with the arbitration agreement."
v) None of these matters is in issue on this application. UM does not challenge the Arbitrator's ability to make an Award finding that it was liable to account and to pay damages to the Government, as per paragraphs 6-8 of the Amended Award. Instead it disputes the Arbitrator's ability to do so by way of a corrected/additional award rather than in his Original Award. This is not a challenge to the Arbitrator's substantive jurisdiction.
vi) That conclusion is supported by two previous decisions of this Court to the effect that a challenge to a tribunal's correction of its award is not a challenge within s67 of the Act; and that erroneous correction of an award under s57 is remediable by a court under s.68(2)(b) (i.e. the tribunal exceeding its powers otherwise than by exceeding its substantive jurisdiction) or not at all. See: CNH Global v PGN Logistics Ltd [2009] 1 CLC 807 (Burton J) at [17]-[19]; Lesotho Highlands Development Authority v Impregilo SpA [2003] 1 All ER (Comm) 22 (Morrison J) at 25. As to the latter, the House of Lords affirmed (obiter) the correctness of Morison J's conclusion as to the unavailability of s67: see [2006] 1 AC 221, 229A (Lord Steyn).
vii) In particular, this application is covered precisely by Burton J.'s conclusion in CNH Global at [19]:
"I have no doubt whatever that s. 67 relates to situations in which it is alleged that the arbitral tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction, i.e. that there was in fact no arbitration clause at all, and no jurisdiction for the arbitrators to act at all at any rate in relation to the relevant dispute, and not to situations in which arbitrators properly appointed were alleged to have exceeded their powers."
Conclusion