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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 >> Public Company Rise v Nibulon SA [2015] EWHC 684 (Comm) (24 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/684.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 684 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building,Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Public Company Rise |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Nibulon S.A |
Defendant |
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for the Claimant
John Russell QC (instructed by Hill Dickinson) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 6 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
Background
(1) Clause 11.3 provided: "Seller is obliged to obtain at his own risk and expenses any export license or any other official document and to perform, where it is required, all customs formalities for export of the goods."(2) Clause 12 provided: "General conditions: All other terms, conditions and rules, not in contradiction with the above contained in Form 78 of GAFTA of which the parties admit that they have knowledge and notice, apply to this transaction and the details above given shall be taken as having been written into such form in the appropriate places."
"PROHIBITION - In case of prohibition of export, blockade or hostilities or in case of any executive or legislative act done by or on behalf of the government of the country of origin or of the territory where the station(s) or private siding(s) of loading named herein is/are situate, restricting export, whether partially or otherwise, any such restriction shall be deemed by both parties to apply to this contract and to the extent of such total or partial restriction to prevent fulfilment whether by shipment or by any other means whatsoever and to that extent this contract or any unfulfilled portion thereof shall be cancelled. Sellers shall advise Buyers without delay with the reasons therefore and, if required, Sellers must produce proof to justify the cancellation."
The Award
(1) The obligation on the Sellers to obtain export licences under clause 11.3 was an absolute obligation (see paragraphs 15.8 and 15.14 of the Award).(2) Once the conclusion was reached that the Sellers were under an absolute obligation, clause 11.3 overrode clause 17 except in the situation of a total ban (see paragraph 15.15 of the Award).
(3) The only circumstance under which the Sellers could have been relieved of the absolute obligation under clause 11.3 was if there had been a total ban on the export of Ukrainian feed corn from Ukraine (see paragraphs 15.11 and 15.12 of the Award).
(4) There was no total ban, as "in the period of export restrictions up to 31 December 2010, grain up to the total quantity of 3,000,000 mts could be exported, under export licences, from Ukraine." (see paragraph 15.11 of the Award).
(5) The Sellers could not rely on clause 17 as they were not "prevented" but were merely "restricted" in making the shipments to the Buyers (see paragraph 15.19 of the Award).
(6) The Sellers were operating under extreme difficulties, and had it been necessary to decide whether the Sellers had discharged their duties of best endeavours to obtain an export licence, the Appeal Board would have unhesitatingly decided that they had (see paragraph 15.14 of the Award).
Permission to appeal
(1) Does clause 11.3 of the Three Contracts override clause 17 of GAFTA78 or does clause 17 operate as a qualification to clause 11.3?(2) Does clause 17 of GAFTA78 only relieve sellers of an obligation to obtain an export licence in circumstances where there is a prohibition amounting to a "total ban"?
(3) Are sellers not able to rely upon clause 17 of GAFTA78 when they are not "prevented" but merely "restricted" from making shipments?
(1) The prohibition clause does not override or qualify clause 11.3 in any circumstances.
(2) There was no "prohibition of export…." so that the contract was not cancelled pursuant to the prohibition clause.
Question (1): Does clause 11.3 of the Three Contracts override clause 17 of GAFTA78 or does clause 17 operate as a qualification to clause 11.3?
"…It is not enough if one term qualifies or modifies the effect of another; to be inconsistent a term must contradict another term or be in conflict with it, such that effect cannot fairly be given to both clauses"
"…it is a commonplace of documentary construction that an apparently wide and absolute provision is subject to limitation, modification or qualification by other provisions. It does not make the later provisions inconsistent or repugnant."
"15.8 In the view of the Appeal Board the central issue is what did Clause 11.3 of the Three Contracts state. As cited above it placed a plain obligation on the Appellant Sellers 'to obtain at [their]own risk and expense any export license…where it is required…' without any qualification. It seems, therefore, to the Appeal Board that this obligation on the Appellant Sellers was an identical obligation to the one falling on the sellers in Pagnan SpA v Tradax. Indeed it could be said that the obligation contained in these words in Clause 11.3 was rather stronger than the obligation contained in the words:"Sellers to provide for export certificate enabling buyers to obtain import licence in E.E.C….."
which Lord Justice Bingham was construing in Pagnan SpA v Tradax.
….
15.11 In the view of the Appeal Board there was only one circumstance under which the Appellant Sellers could have been relieved of its absolute obligation under Clause 11.3 and that was if there had been a total ban on the export of Ukrainian feed corn from Ukraine. In that case all Three Contracts would have been under English law, 'frustrated', relieving both parties from their obligations under them. This was not the case under the Ukraine export quota restrictions. On the contrary, in the period of export restrictions up to 31st December 2010, grain up to the total quantity of 3,000,000 mts could be exported, under export licences, from Ukraine.15.12 Alternatively, in a situation of a total ban on the export of the goods, which are subject of the contract in question, the seller can invoke the provisions of Clause 17 to entitle him to cancel the contract. This is exactly what happened in Pagnan SpA v Tradax"
"generally impermissible……to raise a new point of law which requires consideration of factual materials and in relation to which material findings might have been sought and made had the point been raised at the arbitration. Both the appellant and the respondent are confined to the findings made in the award. The respondent can argue new points of law based on those findings. If, however, the failure to argue the point which the respondent wishes to raise has the result that not all potentially relevant findings have been made then it should not be open to it."
Question 2 - Does clause 17 of GAFTA78 only relieve sellers of an obligation to obtain an export licence in circumstances where there is a prohibition amounting to a "total ban"?
"15.15 Once the conclusion is reached that the Appellant Sellers were under an absolute obligation, Clause 11.3 overrides Clause 17 except in a situation of a total ban. As illustrated above in paragraph 15.12 the seller can then invoke Clause 17 to enable him to cancel the contract. Since there was not, as the Appeal Board finds, a total ban on the export of grain from Ukraine, Clause 17 does not come into play."
"In case of prohibition…restricting export, whether partially or otherwise….to the extent of such total or partial restriction….this contract or any unfulfilled portion thereof shall be cancelled".
"The judge, agreeing with the arbitrators and the Board of Appeal on this point, held that the Prohibition clause requires a causal link between the event in question (usually, but not necessarily, a total or partial prohibition of the shipment of goods) and the sellers' inability to perform their contract and in my view he was right to do so." (emphasis added).
Question 3 - Are sellers not able to rely upon clause 17 of GAFTA78 when they are not "prevented" but merely "restricted" from making shipments?
(1) A "prohibition of export" or "blockade" or "hostilities" or an "executive or legislative act done by or on behalf of the (relevant) government"
(2) "restricting export, whether partially or otherwise".
"The natural construction of this contract in my judgment is that the sellers were to provide for the export certificate, but, in case of any executive or legislative act done by, or on behalf of, the government of Thailand (as the country of origin and shipment) restricting export, the unfulfilled portion of the contract was to be cancelled. That construction does not deprive the special condition of effect. The obligation to provide for the export certificate remained on the sellers. If the certificate was not provided for as a result of oversight, error, mishap, bureaucratic inefficiency or delay, and probably also if the certificate was not provided for simply because the Thai authorities failed to issue it, the sellers would remain liable. But, if the sellers were unable to provide for the certificate because of any impediment falling within the carefully-defined ambit of cl. 19, they were relieved of their contractual obligation because that is what cl. 19 says and there is no indication whatever that cl. 9 is not to apply to this as to all other contractual obligations." (emphasis added)
"15.17 The Appeal board accept these contentions of Mr Debattista but are caught by the word "prevent" in Clause 17. The truth is that the Appellant Sellers were not, in the terms of Clause 17, 'prevented' from making shipments to the Respondent Buyers but merely restricted in doing so. Indeed so restricted that they were eventually unable to obtain the export licences."
"15.21 Since the Appeal Board has held that the Appellant Sellers cannot rely on Clause 17 then it is not necessary to decide if they had produced sufficient proof to justify the Three Contracts being deemed to have been cancelled. However if the Appeal Board was to decide this issue they would have held that the Appellant Sellers fully satisfied this requirement under Clause 17."
(1) In order to be able to establish a qualifying event under clause 17 of GAFTA 1978 it is sufficient to show a relevant event "restricting" rather than "preventing" export.
(2) If a qualifying event is established it is also necessary to show that that event caused the inability to perform.
Conclusion
(1) Clause 17 of GAFTA78 operates as a qualification to clause 11.3 but is not overridden by it.(2) Clause 17 of GAFTA78 does not only relieve sellers of an obligation to obtain an export licence in circumstances where there is a prohibition amounting to a "total ban".
(3) (a) In order to be able to establish a qualifying event under clause 17 of GAFTA 1978 it is sufficient to show a relevant event "restricting" rather than "preventing" export.
(b) If a qualifying event is established it is also necessary to show that that event caused the inability to perform.