BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Gravelor Shipping Ltd v GTLK Asia M5 Ltd & Anor [2023] EWHC 131 (Comm) (27 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/131.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 131 (Comm), [2023] 2 Lloyd's Rep 239 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (KBD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
GRAVELOR SHIPPING LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) GTLK ASIA M5 LIMITED (2) GTLK ASIA M6 LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Chris Smith KC and Andrew Leung (instructed by Tatham & Co) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 12 January 2023
Draft judgment to parties: 23 January 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Friday 27 January 2023 at 10:30am.
Mr Justice Foxton :
INTRODUCTION
i) the Claimant's (Gravelor's) application for summary judgment in the form of declaratory relief as to and an order for specific performance of obligations arising under two bareboat charterparties; and
ii) the Defendants' (GTLK M5 and GTLK M6 and together the Owners) application for a stay of part of the dispute pursuant to s.9 of the Arbitration Act 1996.
THE BACKGROUND
The Charterparties
i) If the Charterparties were terminated for Gravelor's default, Gravelor would be obliged to purchase the Vessels against the payment on demand of the total of the amounts set out in clause 18.3 of the Charterparties, which would include default interest and other costs, expenses and losses incurred by the Owners (the Clause 18.3 Sum).
ii) Gravelor also had early purchase options, and a purchase obligation at the end of the Charterparties' term if they expired without breach on its part, in which eventuality certain of the items making up the Clause 18.3 Sum were not payable.
The key terms of the Charterparties
i) "Sanctions and Export Controls" were defined as "…any and all of the following: … (ii) U.S. sanctions and export controls including those administered by the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Department of the Treasury (the 'OFAC'), the U.S. Department of State, the U.S. Department of Commerce or any other U.S. Government authority or department; (iii) EU restrictive measures implemented pursuant to any EU Council or Commission Regulation or Decision adopted pursuant to a Common Position in further of the EU's Common Foreign and Security Policy…(v) any other sanctions or export control laws and regulations applicable to the Ship, any Obligor, the Owner or any part thereof which are in relation to the supply, use, operation or financing or commercial ships or the transactions contemplated under the Charter Documents".
ii) "Sanctions Target" was defined as: "…a target or subject of any Sanctions and Export Controls including, without limitation, any person or entity designated as a Specially Designated National and Blocked Person or included in the annex to the Executive Order by OFAC".
"(a) All amounts payable by the Charterer under any Charter Document (other than payments under clause 9 (Expenses and indemnities) will be paid in Dollars in time to enable the funds to be cleared on the due date for payment…
(d) If any sum due from the Charterer under any Charter Document…is received or recovered in the Second Currency, the Charterer will, when the Owner receives that sum, indemnify and hold harmless the Owner from and against any loss suffered as a result of any discrepancy between: (A) the rate of exchange used for converting the sum in question from the First Currency in the Second Currency; and (B) the rate or rates of exchange at which the Owner may in the ordinary course of business purchase the First Currency with the Second Currency".
"Where a payment under this Charterparty is incapable of being processed by the relevant banking institution and has not been received by the Owner on the due date by virtue of the Owner becoming a Sanctions Target, the Owner and the Charterer shall cooperate and promptly take all necessary steps in order for the payments to be resumed. Any delay in payments resulting solely from the circumstances referred to in the immediately preceding sentence shall not be deemed an Event of Default contemplated by clause 17.1(a) of this Charterparty."
"(a) The Charterer must not employ and will procure that the Ship is not employed nor permit the Ship to be employed:
(i) in breach of any Sanctions …
(ii) in any manner or for any purpose which would violate or cause the Owner to violate, when and as applicable, any Sanctions
(b) While engaging in any activities with or related to the Ship, the Charterer shall not violate and shall not cause or permit any of its affiliates or the Owner to be in violation of any Sanctions or Export Controls…"
"17.1 Charterer Events of Default
The following events or circumstances will be Events of Default:
(a) If any Charterhire or other amount payable by the Charterer under this Charterparty or under any Charter Document is not received within three (3) Business Days of the due date in the case of a scheduled payment or five (5) Business Days from a demand or any other applicable due date set out in this Charterparty in the case of an unscheduled payment…"
"The Charterer agrees with the Owner that:
(a) it is a condition of this Charterparty that the occurrence of any of the events described in clauses 17.1(a) to 17.1(d) inclusive will constitute an event of default and a repudiatory breach of this Charterparty; and
(b) the occurrence of any of the events described in clauses 17.1(e) to 17.1(s) inclusive will constitute an event of default,
which in each case will entitle the Owner to terminate the chartering of the Ship in accordance with clause 18.1 (Owner's rights) and to recover the amounts specified in clause 18.3 (Payments upon termination) from the Charterer as liquidated damages in the case of a repudiatory breach and as a liquidated sum or debt in the case of an event of default."
"At any time after an Event of Default has occurred and provided the same is continuing the Owner may, at its option:
(a) direct the Charterer either:
(i) to leave the Ship at the port where it is then located or, if it is not then in port, to direct it to the port designated by the Owner, in which event the Charterer's right to retain possession of the Ship will terminate immediately (if the Ship is then in port) or upon the Ship's docking at the designated port; or
(ii) to redeliver the Ship to the Owner immediately in accordance with clause 16 (Redelivery); and/or
(b) without being obliged to give notice to the Charterer, retake possession of the Ship wherever it is located; and/or
(c) (in the case of an Event of Default described in clauses 17.1(a) to 17.1(d) (inclusive)) accept the Charterer's repudiatory breach and (in the case of any Event of Default) by notice to the Charterer (a "Default Notice") terminate the chartering of the Ship immediately; and/or … ."
"On termination of the Chartering of the Ship or the acceleration of the Charter Term, as the case may be, after Delivery for any reason, the Charterer will on demand pay to the Owner as liquidated damages or, as the case may be, a debt:
(a) the Termination Amount calculated as at the relevant Payment Date
(b) all arrears of Charterhire that are due but unpaid at the Payment Date, together with interest at the Default Rate on those amounts from the date on which that Charterhire or other amounts fell due to the date on which the Owner received them;
(c) all arrears of all other amounts payable under this Charterparty and the other Charter Documents that are due but unpaid at the Payment Date, together with interest at the Default Rate on those amounts from the date on which the other amounts fell due to the date on which the Owner receives them;
(d) all other amounts due and payable by the Charterer to the Owner pursuant to this Charterparty;
[…]
Provided that all amounts set out in this clause 18.3 have been duly and irrevocably paid to and received by the Owner in full, the title to the Ship shall be transferred to the Charterer in accordance with clause 19.2. For the avoidance of doubt, any amount which is duly and irrevocably paid to and received by the Owner under the Security Documents shall, to the extent any such payment is of an amount payable by the Charterer to the Owner pursuant to this clause 18.3, be deemed to be a payment of the Charterer for the purposes of this clause 18.3."
"(a) Upon payment by the Charterer of all amounts due and payable by it under clause 18.3 (Payments upon termination), the Owner shall, subject always to the provisions of clauses 19.2 (Transfer of Title) and 19.3 (Clawback), transfer title to the Ship to the Charterer pursuant to clause 19.2 (Transfer of Title).
(b) If the Charterer fails to pay all amounts referred to in clause 18.3 (Payments upon termination), in full within thirty (30) calendar days of the relevant demand, without in any way limiting or reducing the obligation of the Charterer to pay such amounts, the Owner shall be entitled (but not obliged) to enter into a Final Disposition of the Ship with a third party on such terms as it shall think fit. Pending any Final Disposition the Owner shall be free to lease the Ship (directly or indirectly) to any person on such terms as it sees fit and such arrangement shall not constitute a Final Disposition for the purposes of this Charterparty."
"19.1 Purchase option and obligation
Provided that it has complied with all its obligations under the Charter Documents and that Delivery has occurred, the Charterer shall purchase the Ship from the Owner on the Expiry Date and may purchase the Ship at any time from the first anniversary of the Delivery Date until the Expiry Date upon giving not less than three (3) months prior irrevocable written notice to the Owner, in each case by paying to the Owner a purchase price equal to the aggregate of (the "Purchase Option Price"):
(a) the Termination Amount;
(b) all interest which has accrued or which has fallen due in accordance with the Charterparty but which has not been paid or which falls due on or before the relevant Termination Date; and
(c) all other sums then due and payable by the Charterer under the Charter Documents."
19.2 Transfer of title
Any purchase of the Ship by the Charterer pursuant to this clause 19 (Purchase Option and Obligation) will, unless the Owner otherwise agrees in writing, be on the following terms:
(a) the Owner shall transfer title to and ownership of the Ship to the Charterer by delivering a bill of sale, recordable in the Charterer's nominated flag state, executed, notarized and apostilled/legalized at the Charterer's expense;
(b) the transfer shall be on an "as is, where is" basis, and no condition, warranty or representation of any kind will be made or given by the Owner or its officers, employees or agents in relation to the airworthiness, condition, design, merchantability or fitness for use or operation of the Ship, and all conditions, warranties and representations (or obligations or liability, in contract or in tort) in relation to any such matters, expressed or implied, statutory or otherwise, shall be expressly excluded;
(c) no continuing obligation of any kind shall be assumed by the Owner in relation to the Ship or its condition or operation following the date of purchase.
19.3 Clawback
It shall be a condition precedent to the Owners' obligation to transfer of title to the Ship to the Charterer pursuant to this clause 19 … in circumstances where an Event of Default has occurred and is continuing, that there shall have been furnished to the Owner a legal opinion of independent competent bankruptcy counsel acceptable to the Owner, obtained at the cost of the Charterer, to the effect that there is and will be no material risk of payments made for the account of the Charterer as referred to in clause 19.1 … or 18.3 …. To being 'clawed back', recouped or otherwise being required to be refunded or accounted to, or paid to, the Charterer or any person claiming through the Charterer (including, without limitation, any liquidator, bankruptcy trustee, administrator, examiner or other similar insolvency official or creditor or shareholder of the Charterer) or other evidence satisfactory in all respects to the Charterer to that effect."
The imposition of sanctions
"Without prejudice to our primary position set out in the Default Notice and in accordance with our rights and remedies under the Charter following the occurrence and continuance of the Event of Default, we will be ready to transfer title to the Vessel to Charterer upon receipt by us of all amounts due (as set out in clause 18.3) … calculated as of actual payment date (the 'Due Amount') which shall be paid to one of the following bank account of GTLK Asia Limited as might be further agreed between the Charterer and the Owner".
The EU and US sanctions
The EU sanctions
i) Article 1 contained a series of definitions:
a) "Economic resources" are defined as "assets of every kind, whether tangible or intangible, movable or immovable, which are not funds but may be used to obtain funds, goods or services". It is common ground that this definition encompasses the Vessels.
b) "Freezing of economic resources … means preventing the use of economic resources to obtain funds, goods or services in any way, including, but not limited to, by selling, hiring or mortgaging them".
c) By Article 2(1), "all funds and economic resources belonging to, owned, held or controlled by any natural or legal persons, entities or bodies, or natural or legal persons, entities or bodies associated with them, as listed in Annex I, shall be frozen".
d) Article 2(2) provides that "no funds or economic resources shall be made available, directly or indirectly, to or for the benefit of natural or legal persons, entities or bodies, or natural or legal persons, entities or bodies associated with them, as listed in Annex I".
ii) Article 5 provides for a derogation from Article 2 (a) where the funds or economic resources were (a) "…subject to…a judicial decision enforceable in the Member State concerned, prior to or after [the date on which the natural or legal person, entity or body referred to in Article 2 was included in Annex I], (b) "the funds or economic resources will be used exclusively to satisfy claims…recognised as valid in such a decision…", (c) "the decision is not for the benefit of a natural or legal person, entity or body listed in Annex I" and (d) "recognition of the decision is not contrary to public policy in the Member State concerned".
iii) Article 7(2) provided for a further derogation from Article 2(2) for "the addition to frozen accounts of…payments due under contracts, agreements or obligations that were concluded or arose before the date on which the natural or legal person, entity or body referred to in Article 2 has been included in Annex I…".
The US sanctions
The disputed change of ownership
i) On 31 August 2022, 100% of the shares in GAML were sold by GTLK Asia to "LLC PRSD-AKTIV" (the New Parent) pursuant to an SPA governed by Hong Kong law.
ii) The New Parent is said to be ultimately owned by the "Ministry of Property and Natural Resources of Chelyabinsk Oblast".
iii) GTLK M5 has been renamed "AM Asia M5 Limited" and GTLK Asia M6 has been renamed "Albatross Marine Asia Limited".
i) Chelyabinsk is a landlocked province, and the New Parent is said to be owned by a local government entity within the Russian Federation. The acquisition by a landlocked local government entity of companies owning two laid-up bulk carriers lacks any obvious commercial rationale.
ii) The copy of the SPA produced to the court has the "Consideration" section redacted, such that it is not possible for the court to determine whether it is consistent with an arms-length sale, and references to provisions dealing with intercompany loans, including those owed to JSC GTLK, have also been redacted.
iii) The New Parent has no history of activity or operations in the maritime sector.
iv) It appears to have signed up the SPA without knowing what the inter-company loan liabilities of the Owners were at the date of acquisition, beyond knowing that they were less than USD 375 million (a provision which appears calculated to alarm rather than reassure).
v) Mr Gorizontov was appointed as a director of the Owners and GTLK Asia on 26 July 2022. He was re-appointed as a director on 1 November 2022 following the apparent change of beneficial ownership. Mr William Ho remains the Director and Legal Counsel of GAML and the Owners.
vi) Gravelor has raised a number of legitimate questions as to the purpose of the share sale, and asked for an explanation of certain features of the transaction (Mr Gidman's email of 30 September 2022). There has been no response.
vii) Despite it being very clear that Gravelor would invite the court to look sceptically at the Disputed Transfer, no evidence was served by the Owners addressing it. The suggestion that the Owners would wish to adduce such evidence at trial is no answer to what was clearly a considered decision to say as little as possible.
i) There are objective features of the transfer which can be shown to summary judgment standard to raise very strong suspicions as to the bona fides of the transaction.
ii) The effect of these features is that it will not be possible to make any payment due to the Owners otherwise than in the same manner in which payment can be made to a sanctioned entity.
THE DISPUTE IN SUMMARY
i) Gravelor contends that the effect of these sanctions is that it cannot pay the Clause 18.3 Sum in the currency stipulated in the Charterparties, US Dollars, or into the account nominated by the Owners for payment, the Gazprom Account.
ii) There is a dispute as to whether the Owners still fall within the scope of the relevant sanctions regimes (which I have not been asked to resolve) following the alleged change of beneficial ownership in August 2022.
iii) There is a dispute as to whether the effect of clause 8.10 of the Charterparties is to permit Gravelor to make payments otherwise than in US Dollars and otherwise than by payment into the Gazprom Account.
iv) There is a dispute as to whether Gravelor can seek judgment on the basis of the rights to delivery it would have under clause 18.3 of the Charterparties unless it is willingly now to forego its primary case that it has validly exercised its clause 19.1 purchase option.
i) requiring the Owners to nominate a Euro account into which the Clause 18.3 Sum can be paid in compliance with the Sanctions Regulation; and
ii) in default of such nomination, authorising the Court under s.39 of the Senior Courts Act 1981 to give such a nomination on the Owners' behalf.
i) There is a real prospect of the Owners showing that damages would be an adequate remedy.
ii) The terms of the proposed order for specific performance are too vague.
THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT TEST
HAS ANY CLAUSE 18.3 ENTITLEMENT TO TRANSFER ARISEN?
i) It is said that the Owners have made no demand for payment under clause 18.3(a), and have not stipulated the amount to be paid, and that this is a condition precedent to any obligation on the Owners' part to transfer title.
ii) It is said that Gravelor cannot exercise any clause 18.3 right because it is in breach of its obligation under clause 18.1 to redeliver the Vessels to the Owners.
iii) It is said that clause 19.3 is engaged, and Gravelor has not provided the necessary legal opinion.
Have the Owners made a demand for payment so as to trigger a clause 18.3 entitlement on Gravelor's part?
i) The Owners could terminate the Charterparties, and demand and obtain redelivery of the Vessels.
ii) Having done so, the Owners could decide (for as long as they wished) not to demand the Clause 18.3 Sum.
iii) Unless and until such a demand was made, the Owners would not themselves be able to sell the Vessels. This is because clause 18.6(ii) conditions the Owners' right to sell the Vessels to someone else on Gravelor's failure to pay all amounts referred to in clause 18.3, and there could be no "failure to pay … within … 30 days of the relevant demand" without a demand.
iv) There is an issue, which it is not necessary to resolve, as to whether the Owners' ability to trade the Vessels pursuant to the final sentence of clause 18.3 is similarly conditional on non-payment by Gravelor in response to a demand.
v) If the right to trade the Vessels is so conditioned, then on Owners' case, they can keep the Vessels idle for as long as they wish, but without the ability to sell or trade them, and without any express obligation to maintain them, and then (at a point of their choosing) serve a clause 18.3 notice. On doing so, Gravelor would come under a debt obligation to pay the Clause 18.3 Sum which would include interest at the Default Rate from the Termination Date, even though there may have been a very substantial change in the condition of the Vessels between those dates, and even though many years may have passed.
vi) If the right to trade the Vessels is not so conditioned, then the Owners could trade the Vessels for as long as they wished to so, keep the profits of doing so, and then (perhaps when the market turned) make a demand which would require the Owners to pay the Termination Amount as it would have been due had a demand been made before any trading took place, plus default interest from the Termination Date.
vii) In any event it would enable the Owners to demand interest at a default rate during a period when there was no default.
"will entitle the Owner to terminate the chartering of the Ship in accordance with clause 18.1 … and to recover the amounts specified in clause 18.3 from the Charterer as liquidated damages in the case of a repudiatory breach and as a liquidated sum or debt in the case of an event of default".
The drafting assumption underpinning the clause is that it is the act of termination which brings Owners' monetary entitlements into being, not the decision to make a demand.
i) After terminating the Charterparties on 25 April 2022, on 16 June 2022 the Owners wrote to Gravelor saying that "Without prejudice to our primary position set out in the Default Notice and in accordance with our rights and remedies under the Charter following the occurrence and continuance of the Event of Default, we will be ready to transfer title to the Vessel to Charterer upon receipt by us of all amounts due (as set out in clause 18.3) … calculated as of actual payment date (the 'Due Amount') which shall be paid to one of the following bank account of GTLK Asia Limited as might be further agreed between the Charterer and the Owner".
ii) On 21 July 2022, the Owners stated that without prejudice to their position as to Gravelor's default "we acknowledge that Owners will transfer the title to the Vessel in accordance with the terms and conditions set out in clause 18.3 of the Charter upon receipt by the Owner of all amounts due … to be calculated as of actual payment date".
iii) I see real force in Gravelor's contention that if some act or election on the Owners' part is necessary to bring the clause 18.3 sale mechanism into operation (and with it an obligation on Owners' part to do what was necessary to consummate that process, by providing the relevant figures), these communications had that consequence. Mr Wright KC accepted, however, that the absence from those communications of any figures from the Owners necessary to calculate the Clause 18.3 Sum raised a potential obstacle for his argument that the Owners' communications amounted to a clause 18.3 demand.
iv) It is not necessary to resolve that issue, because on 9 December 2022, the Owners served a witness statement from Mr Dmitry Gorizontov. Paragraphs 17 and 18 of that witness statement provided:
"The Defendants do not agree that no Event of Default has occurred or is continuing under the bareboat charterparties. Any transfer to the Claimant of title to the vessels can therefore only take place on payment and receipt of the sums payable under Clause 18.3 into an account or accounts nominated by the Defendants in accordance with the terms of the bareboat charterparties. The termination sum for each vessel as at 1 January 2023 will be as follows:
a WL TOTMA: US$14,534,266.42.
b WL KIRILLOV: US14,935,562.90".
The above sums should be paid into an unfrozen bank account or accounts nominated by the Defendants".
i) First, that Mr Gorizontov was not intending to specify the Clause 18.3 Sum, but only the "Termination Amount" as specified in clause 18.3(a). This was a thoroughly unmeritorious argument. The figure demanded by Mr Gorizontov was clearly not "the Termination Amount" (which was significantly lower that the amount demanded). Mr Gorizontov appears to have used the undefined expression "termination sum" as a shorthand for the full amount payable under clause 18.3. As Mr Wright KC noted, at the time when his witness statement was served, Tathams were acting in a very similar dispute in which very similar charterparties used the term "termination sum" to refer to the entire amount payable under the equivalent of clause 18.3 (Havila Kystruten As v STLC Europe Twenty-Three Leasing Limited [2022] EWHC 3166 (Comm), a case also concerned with vessels financed by the Russian Ministry of Transportation).
ii) Second, that the figures prepared by Mr Gorizontov were incorrect, as noted in a later witness statement of Mr Alexey Yanbukhtin. However, there is nothing in clause 18.3 which would invalidate a demand simply because the person making the demand got their sums wrong. To the extent that further amounts beyond those demanded were in fact due, the Owners would retain the right to recover them as a debt (clause 18.5 providing that "notwithstanding any termination of the Chartering of the Ship … and the issuance of any demand under clause 18.3 … or 18.4 …, following such termination and/or issuance the Owner may issue further demands in respect of, and the Charterer shall upon demand pay, any amounts referred to in those clauses which have not yet been incurred and/or quantified when any previous demand was made". Mr Wright KC has confirmed, in any event, that if the Owners' case that the parties are in a clause 18 rather than clause 19 regime is upheld, Gravelor accepts that the amounts set out in Mr Yanbukhtin's witness statement are due, and it will not seek to re-open that calculation.
iii) Mr Gorizontov's witness statement "post-dates both the issuance of this application and the Particulars of Claim and Charterers' entitlement to relief must be judged by reference to the position at the latter points in time". No authority was cited for that thoroughly unattractive assertion, and I am satisfied it is without merit.
Does Gravelor's (assumed) breach of its clause 18.1 obligation to redeliver the Vessels to the Owners prevent it from exercising its rights under clause 18.3?
i) No such condition is specified in clause 18.3 itself. Indeed clause 18.3 is clear as to what pre-conditions must be satisfied before Gravelor's clause 18.3 right can be exercised. It states:
"Provided that all amounts set out in this clause 18.3 have been duly and irrevocably paid to and received by the Owners in full, the title to the Ship shall be transferred to the Charterer in accordance with clause 19.2".
ii) Nor is any such condition specified in clause 18.6. On the contrary, clause 18.6(a) provides "upon payment by the Charterer of all amounts due and payable by it under clause 18.3, the Owner shall, subject always to the provisions of clauses 19.2 and 19.3, transfer title to the Ship to the Charterer". This identifies three conditions to transfer (payment and compliance with clauses 19.2 and 19.3) but not compliance with any obligation under clause 18.1. Further, while clause 18.6(b) addresses what is to happen if Gravelor does not make the clause 18.3 payment when due, it says nothing about what is to happen if the clause 18.1 redelivery obligation is not fulfilled.
iii) Clause 19.3 creates an express condition precedent to transfer (which is addressed below). Clause 19.1 makes compliance with all obligations under the Charterparties a condition to Gravelor's right to invoke that transfer regime. These paragraphs provide very strong support for the view that, when the Charterparties were intended to create a condition precedent to Gravelor's right to the transfer of the Vessels, they do so in clear terms.
iv) There is nothing in Mr Smith KC's assertion that the Owners' clause 18.1 right would be "rendered nugatory" unless such a condition precedent is implied. If clause 18.3 is triggered and Gravelor makes the payment due, the Owners' entire performance interest under the Charterparties will have been satisfied, and (having transferred title to Gravelor) they would have absolutely no basis for demanding possession of the Vessels, simply so they could immediately be handed back to Gravelor.
v) Nor does clause 18.6(b) necessarily assume that the Vessels will have been redelivered to the Owners before any clause 18.3 transfer can take place. It simply reflects the fact that there may have been such a delivery (whether voluntarily or following legal process).
Is clause 19.3 is arguably engaged?
"in circumstances where an Event of Default has occurred and is continuing, that there shall have been furnished to the Owner a legal opinion of independent competent bankruptcy counsel acceptable to the Owner, obtained at the cost of the Charterer, to the effect that there is and will be no material risk of payments made for the account of the Charterer as referred to in clause 19.1 … or 18.3 …. being 'clawed back', recouped or otherwise being required to be refunded or accounted to, or paid to, the Charterer or any person claiming through the Charterer (including, without limitation, any liquidator, bankruptcy trustee, administrator, examiner or other similar insolvency official or creditor or shareholder of the Charterer) or other evidence satisfactory in all respects to the Charterer to that effect."
CAN GRAVELOR SEEK SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON THE BASIS OF ITS CLAUSE 18.3 RIGHT NOW WHILE RESERVING THE RIGHT TO ARGUE THAT IT IS ENTITLED TO ACQUIRE THE VESSELS UNDER CLAUSE 19.1 AT THE TRIAL?
i) The clause 18.3 regime, where Gravelor has breached the Charterparties in such a way as to entitle the Owners to terminate them. The "price" for transfer in these circumstances involves not simply payment of the Termination Amount, but a series of other costs including interest at the default rate.
ii) The clause 19.1 regime, under which Gravelor has an option to acquire the Vessels for payment of the Termination Amount plus outstanding amounts and accrued (non-default) interest.
i) First, that clause 18.3 requires payment of the amounts due under that clause "duly and irrevocably", and that payment made on the basis that Gravelor reserves the right to claim back any amount exceeding the sum due under clause 19.1 renders the payment revocable.
ii) Second, that a court judgment that Gravelor is entitled to transfer of the Vessels on the basis of clause 18.3 would be res judicata.
i) If the court is otherwise satisfied of Gravelor's "in principle" entitlement to judgment, applying the summary judgment test, then its entitlement to such relief, and the inadequacy of damages as a remedy, will have been established to the court's most demanding merits standard.
ii) Ordering delivery on the basis that Gravelor pay the higher of the two amounts potentially due, with the ability to recover any excess, fully protects the Owners' position. There is no risk of the Owners being prejudiced by any later determination that the lower amount is due.
iii) While Gravelor is exposed to the risk of irrecoverability of any excess, it is willing to assume that risk as the price of obtaining the relief sought.
MUST THE CLAUSE 18.3 AMOUNT BE PAID IN US$ INTO THE BANK ACCOUNT NOMINATED BY THE OWNERS?
"Where a payment under this Charterparty is incapable of being processed by the relevant banking institution and has not been received by the Owner on the due date by virtue of the Owner becoming a Sanctions Target, the Owner and the Charterer shall cooperate and promptly take all necessary steps in order for the payments to be resumed. Any delay in payments resulting solely from the circumstances referred to in the immediately preceding sentence shall not be deemed an Event of Default contemplated by clause 17.1(a) of this Charterparty."
i) First, whether clause 18.3 applies in circumstances in which it is accepted that it is arguable that the effect of the Disputed Transfer is that the Owners are no longer Sanctions Targets.
ii) Second, whether clause 18.3 applies when it is the paying banking institution, rather than the receiving banking institution, which is said to be incapable of processing the payment.
iii) Third, whether the evidence establishes to summary judgment standard that the paying bank or any substitute is "incapable of processing" payment of the clause 18.3 amount into the Gazprom Account by reason of the original designation of the Owners as Sanctions Targets.
iv) Fourth, if clause 18.3 is engaged, whether clause 8.10 has the effect that payment of the clause 18.3 amount in Euros into a bank account which will be subject to the EU sanctions regime constitutes a good discharge of Gravelor's obligations under the Charterparties.
Does clause 8.10 apply in circumstances in which it is accepted that it is arguable that the effect of the Disputed Transfer is that the Owners are no longer Sanctions Targets?
Does clause 8.10 apply when it is the paying banking institution, rather than the receiving banking institution, which is said to be incapable of making the payment into the Gazprom Account?
i) While clause 8.10 only applies to payments due to the Owners, clause 8.10 refers to "the relevant banking institution", clearly contemplating that more than one banking institution may be incapable of processing a payment, and that it is for that reason that the Owners have not received it. That is obviously a reference to the paying bank and the receiving bank.
ii) As the Owners were, at the date of the Charterparties, in the ultimate beneficial ownership of the Russian Federation, and were to receive payment in USD, it was overwhelmingly more likely that if the Owners became Sanctions Targets, the problems would arise at the paying end rather than the receiving end.
iii) There is no commercial reason why clause 8.10 would address the incapability of making a payment by virtue of the Owners becoming Sanctions Targets only when the incapability is caused by difficulties on the part of the receiving bank, and not the paying bank.
Does the evidence establish to summary judgment standard that the paying bank or any substitute is "incapable of processing" payment of the clause 18.3 amount into the Gazprom Account by virtue of the original designation of the Owners as Sanctions Targets?
i) First, it is striking that the Owners do not appear to have been able to persuade any English law firm to act for them on the basis that the effect of the Disputed Transfers was that they were no longer subject to sanctions (Mr Gorizontov's emails to the court of 2 and 3 November 2022). It was only the enactment of General Licence INT/2022/2252300 issued by the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation on 28 October 2022 which enabled the Owners to obtain legal representation in this jurisdiction.
ii) Second, while there is something in Mr Smith KC's submission that the enquiries sent by Gravelor to four banks asking whether they would be willing to make payments were leading in suggesting that the shareholders of the Owners after the Disputed Transfer were "possibly owned or controlled by the Russian state", that is a fair reflection of the evidence as it currently stands. The two banks who replied said that they would not make payments to the Owners on the information now available (Credit Suisse and Bank of Cyprus):
a) On 22 December 2022, the Bank of Cyprus informed Gravelor that such a "transaction cannot be facilitated".
b) On 21 December 2022, Credit Suisse AG informed Gravelor that it would not "accept" the transaction.
iii) Third, and tellingly, if the Owners are not in fact sanctioned entities, they will be able to access and deal with any payment made into an account with a bank which is subject to and will follow the EU sanctions regime. It is precisely because the Owners recognise that they will not be able to persuade such a bank that they are no longer sanctioned and money can be released accordingly that the Owners argue that such a payment would not be contractual. The Owners accept that they will not be able to persuade any bank which is subject to EU or US sanctions regimes to pay them those funds "for the foreseeable future" (indeed they suggest that they "may never be able to do so").
Does clause 8.10 have the effect that payment of the clause 18.3 amount in Euros into a bank account which will be subject to the EU sanctions regime constitutes a good discharge of Gravelor's obligations under the Charterparties?
i) into an account other than that nominated by the Owners, when the effect of doing so is that the Owners would not in practice be able to access the amount paid for some significant period due to the impact of EU sanctions; and
ii) (very much by way of a subsidiary point) in a non-contractual currency.
i) Mr Justice Brandon in The Brimnes was addressing the issue of when the process of payment was complete, and whether hire had (yet) been paid when a transfer order was received by the payee's bank correspondents, or only when the funds were actually credited to the payee's bank. In that context, he observed:
"I consider first the meaning of 'payment … in cash' in clause 5 of the charterparty. In my view these words must be interpreted against the background of modern commercial practice. So interpreted it seems to me that they cannot mean only payment in dollar bills or other legal tender of the United States. They must, as the owners contend, have a wider meaning, comprehending any commercially recognised method of transferring funds the results of which is to give the transferee the unconditional right to the immediate use of the funds transferred. This would include both the direct and the indirect transfer methods used by Hambros as agents for the charterers in this case."
ii) The Chikuma is another case in which the issue was whether matters intrinsic to the receipt and processing of the payment in the banking chain, before that process had completed its ordinary course (such that the amount was not yet capable of earning interest for the payee), meant that there had been no payment. Lord Bridge approved Mr Justice Robert Goff's conclusion that Mr Justice Brandon's reference to "unconditional" meant "equivalent to unfettered and unrestricted".
iii) In the present case, however, payment into an account of a bank who would seek to comply with its obligations under the EU and US sanctions regimes would not leave the payment process incomplete, nor would the Owners' difficulty in accessing those funds (or perhaps the impossibility of doing so) result from any feature of the payment process. Instead, it would be the result of an entirely external limitation arising from a perceived characteristic of the payee.
iv) I understood that Mr Smith KC was ultimately disposed to accept that payment into a bank account which could not be accessed by the payee because of a freezing injunction would still constitute payment and give the payor a good discharge. Whether accepted or not, the proposition is correct, and even applies when it is the paying party who has obtained the freezing order as the "ship sale" freezing order cases show (The P [1992] 1 Lloyd's Rep 470, 472; Ateni Maritime Corporation Great Marine Ltd (The Great Marine) (No 1) [1990] 2 Lloyd's 245, 249).
v) I also understood Mr Smith KC to accept that, if the nominated account had been an account which was "frozen" in the sense in which the term is being used in this case (i.e. an account with a bank which will seek to comply with the EU and US sanctions regimes), payment into that account would nonetheless constitute payment for the purposes of the Charterparties. That was the conclusion reached (in my view, correctly) by Mr Houseman KC sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court in Havila Kystruten AS v STLC Europe) Twenty-Three Leasing Limited [2022] EWHC 3166 (Comm), [97], where he observed:
"Whether or not the payee, here the lessor, has access to or gets the benefit immediate or otherwise, of funds in such bank account is immaterial to this contractual analysis. This account was frozen when it was nominated. No other entity has access to or the benefit of such funds, and certainly not the payor, i.e. the lessee, which is what matters most".
vi) In my view, the position would not change if the account had become frozen after nomination. By paying into it, Gravelor would have done all that the Charterparties required.
vii) It is clear, therefore, that the mere fact that the transfer of funds is made into a bank account from which the Owners will have great difficulty withdrawing them does not of itself mean that payment has not taken place for the purposes of the Charterparty.
i) in requiring the Owners to nominate a new bank account, and thereby change the identity of the account into which the payment had to be made; and
ii) in requiring the Owners to accept payment in Euros instead of USD.
"36.3. A Force Majeure Event is an event or state of affairs which meets all of the following criteria:
…
d) It cannot be overcome by reasonable endeavors from the Party affected."
"55. The parties' arguments, both in this court and in the court below, were principally concerned with the question of reasonable endeavours. But in my judgment the real question in this case is whether acceptance of RTI's proposal to pay freight in euros and to bear the cost of converting those euros into dollars would overcome the state of affairs caused by the imposition of sanctions on Rusal. If it would, it would have been a very straightforward matter for MUR to accept that proposal, requiring no exertion on its part. If it would not, no amount of endeavours, reasonable or otherwise, would change that situation.
56. So the question is whether, in order to overcome the state of affairs in question, it was essential for the contract to be performed in strict accordance with its terms (as Mr Eaton submitted) – in this case, therefore, whether that state of affairs could only be overcome if RTI found a way to make timely payments of freight in US dollars. In my judgment that is too narrow an approach to the construction of the clause. Terms such as "state of affairs" and "overcome" are broad and non-technical terms and clause 36 should be applied in a common sense way which achieves the purpose underlying the parties' obligations – in this case, concerned with payment obligations, that MUR should receive the right quantity of US dollars in its bank account at the right time. I see no reason why a solution which ensured the achievement of this purpose should not be regarded as overcoming the state of affairs resulting from the imposition of sanctions. It is an ordinary and acceptable use of language to say that a problem or state of affairs is overcome if its adverse consequences are completely avoided.
57. The arbitrators' finding in paragraph 50 of their award was that RTI's proposal would have presented "no disadvantages" to MUR and could have been accepted with "no detriment" to it. There was no doubt about the ability and willingness of RTI to make payment in euros, and to bear any additional costs or exchange rate losses in converting the euros to US dollars. Acceptance of RTI's proposal would have achieved precisely the same result as performance of the contractual obligation to pay in US dollars, namely the receipt in MUR's bank account of the right quantity of dollars at the right time. MUR's contractual right to payment in dollars remained, but MUR would have suffered no damage whatever as a result of RTI's breach consisting of payment in euros.
58. Accordingly, unless the word "overcome" necessarily means that the contract must be performed in strict accordance with its terms, which in my judgment it does not, the arbitrators' conclusion in paragraph 51 of the award that the force majeure could have been "overcome by reasonable endeavours from the Party affected" is a finding of fact, or at any rate of mixed fact and law, with which the court should not interfere.
59. The position would be different if RTI's proposal would have resulted in any detriment to MUR or in something different from what was required by the contract. In such a case, it could not be said that the force majeure had been overcome, but only (at most) that it had been partially overcome. That would not satisfy clause 36.3(d). But on the facts as found by the arbitrators, there was no difference between what MUR would obtain from acceptance of RTI's proposal and what it was entitled to under the contract."
i) The identity of the bank account into which payments must be made under the Charterparties is not fixed by a contractual obligation which can only be changed by a contractual variation with the consent of both parties, but results from the unilateral nomination of the Owners from time-to-time.
ii) Clause 8.10 expressly addresses the position where a payment cannot be processed by a "relevant bank" because the Owners have become a Sanctions Target which, as I have said, extends to both the incapability of the paying bank and the receiving bank. It is, therefore, a clause with a much narrower and more focussed target than the general force majeure clause in MUR Shipping, and that focus is itself highly instructive in determining what the clause can require of Gravelor and of the Owners.
iii) In particular, the Charterparties specifically contemplated that the Owners might become the subject of US, EU or other sanctions and that the Owners might be designated as a "Specially Designated National and Blocked Person". It would have been obvious to both parties that sanctions of this kind were likely to include attempts to block the Owners' access to and use of funds if they became a Sanctions Target.
iv) The consequences to Gravelor of being unable to make a contractually compliant payment as a result of the Owners becoming a Sanctions Target are potentially very significant.
v) As I have stated, payment into a "frozen account" designated by the Owners under clause 8.3 would constitute a contractually compliant payment.
What is the consequence of my finding as to the effect of clause 8.10?
CAN GRAVELOR ESTABLISH TO THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD THAT AN ORDER FOR SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE IS APPROPRIATE?
Is it arguable that damages would constitute an adequate remedy?
i) uncertainty as to the Owners' financial ability to meet any damages award (cf. Evans Marshall & Co Limited v Bertola SA and another [1973] 1 WLR 349, 380-81);
ii) the difficulty of enforcing any award, in the light of the sanctions regime.
i) on the current evidence, the market value of the Vessels substantially exceeds Gravelor's net loss; and
ii) the effect of the Disputed Transfer is that the Owners are not in fact subject to sanctions.
i) Chitty on Contracts (34th) Vol 1, [30-023] provides "specific performance may also be ordered to avoid the risk that the defendant may not be 'good for the money'.
ii) Spry, The Principles of Equitable Remedies (8th edition), 68 states:
"It appears to be clear that a significant risk that a legal remedy such as damages will be ineffective on the ground of the inadequate resources of the defendant or otherwise, may of itself justify the conclusion that it is inadequate. Further, even a very slight risk of insolvency of the defendant may be decisive, especially in combination with other matters that tend to show that only if the plaintiff is given specific relief in equity will he be sufficiently protected."
(emphasis added).
iii) In Liberty Mercian Ltd v Cuddy Civil Engineering Ltd [2013] EWHC 4110 (TCC), [18], having referred to this passage in Spry, Ramsey J ordered specific performance of a contractual obligation to provide a performance bond (which I accept raises particular issues), stating "where, as here, the chances of a judgment being satisfied cannot be rated as other than questionable, damages would prima facie not be an adequate remedy."
iv) Similarly, in Re Gillie (1996) 70 FCR 254 Finn J said:
"Because the circumstances here are ones in which there are reasonable grounds for apprehending that an award of damages would go unsatisfied, and because no set-off or cross claim has been raised, the case is one'"where it would be unjust or improper that [Melissa] should have the option of paying the money or keep the [cattle]' cf Chilton v Carrington (1855) 24 LJCP 78 at 80. I will, then, give judgment for the delivery of the cattle"
(emphasis added).
i) It is known the Vessels are mortgaged to a sanctioned bank, and the extent of Owners' unencumbered interest in them is not known.
ii) It is known that the Owners owe substantial intercompany loans, but their amount is not known.
iii) Unless Gravelor continues to meet the insurance and maintenance costs, the condition and value of the Vessels will fall. On the unchallenged evidence before the court, the effect of sanctions while title remains with the Owners is impeding maintenance in any event. The evidence is that:
"Equipment manufacturers have refused to provide service and supplies to the Vessels, affecting the safe navigation and maintenance of the Vessels. It has not been possible to undertake key maintenance of the Vessels, with the result that their condition is deteriorating".
iv) The circumstances surrounding the Disputed Transfer will make the prospects of enforcing any judgment against the Owners challenging for the foreseeable future.
Is the order sought too vague to be the subject of a mandatory injunction compelling performance?
"If the terms of the court's order, reflecting the terms of the obligation, cannot be precisely drawn, the possibility of wasteful litigation over compliance is increased. So is the oppression caused by the defendant having to do things under threat of proceedings for contempt. The less precise the order, the fewer the signposts to the forensic minefield which he has to traverse. The fact that the terms of a contractual obligation are sufficiently definite to escape being void for uncertainty, or to found a claim for damages, or to permit compliance to be made a condition of relief against forfeiture, does not necessarily mean that they will be sufficiently precise to be capable of being specifically enforced."
THE STAY APPLICATION
CONCLUSION