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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Ailsa Craig Fishing Co Ltd v Malvern Fishing Co Ltd [1981] UKHL 12 (26 November 1981) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1981/12.html Cite as: [1983] 1 WLR 964, 1982 SLT 377, [1981] UKHL 12, [1983] WLR 964, [1983] 1 All ER 101 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/241
Lord
Wilberforce
Lord
Elwyn-Jones
Lord Salmon
Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
Lord
Lowry
HOUSE OF LORDS
AILSA
CRAIG FISHING COMPANY LIMITED
(APPELLANTS)
v.
MALVERN FISHING COMPANY LIMITED AND OTHERS
(RESPONDENTS)
(FIRST
APPEAL)
MALVERN FISHING COMPANY LIMITED AND OTHERS
(RESPONDENTS)
v.
AILSA CRAIG FISHING COMPANY LIMITED
(APPELLANTS)
(SECOND
APPEAL)
Lord Wilberforce
My Lords,
The only questions for decision in
these appeals are (i) whether the
liability of the respondents,
Securicor (Scotland) Ltd., under a short-term
contract made on
31st December 1971, has been effectively limited by a
special
condition in that contract and if so (ii) whether the applicable
limit
is £1,000 or £10,000.
Whether a clause limiting
liability is effective or not is a question of
construction of
that clause in the context of the contract as a whole. If
it is to
exclude liability for negligence, it must be most clearly
and
unambiguously expressed, and in such a contract as this, must
be construed
contra proferentem. I do not think that there
is any doubt so far. But
I venture to add one further
qualification, or at least clarification: one
must not strive to
create ambiguities by strained construction, as I think
that the
appellants have striven to do. The relevent words must be given,
if
possible, their natural, plain meaning. Clauses of limitation are
not
regarded by the courts with the same hostility as clauses of
exclusion: this
is because they must be related to other
contractual terms, in particular to
the risks to which the
defending party may be exposed, the remuneration
which he
receives, and possibly also the opportunity of the other party
to
insure.
It is clear, on the findings of
the Lord Ordinary, that the respondents
were negligent as well as
in material breach of their contractual obligations.
The
negligence consisted in a total or partial failure to provide the
service
contracted for viz. " continuous security cover for
your [the pursurers']
"vessels from 1900 hours on 31/12/71
until 0700 hours on 5/1/72 " over
the increased area
specified in the contract. It is arguable, in my opinion,
that the
failure was not total, in that some security against some risks
was
provided, though not that which was necessary to prevent the
actual damage
which occurred. But I do not think that it makes a
difference as regards
the applicability of the clause of
limitation whether this is right or not,
and since their Lordships
in the Inner House were of opinion that the
failure was total, I
will proceed on the assumption that this was so.
The clause of limitation was as follows (special condition of contract 2(f)):
" (f) If, pursuant to
the provisions set out herein, any liability on the
" part of
the Company shall arise (whether under the express or
"
implied terms of this Contract, or at Common Law, or in any
"
other way) to the customer for any loss or damage of whatever
"
nature arising out of or connected with the provision of, or
2
" purported provision of, or
failure in provision of, the services
" covered by this
Contract, such liability shall be limited to the
" payment by
the Company by way of damages of a sum ..."
[alternatives are stated to which I shall refer later].
This clause is on the face of it
clear. It refers to failure in provision of
the services covered
by the contract. There is no warrant as a matter of
construction
for reading " failure " as meaning " partial failure
", i.e, as
excluding " total failure " and
there is no warrant in authority for so reading
the word as a
matter of law. I am clearly of opinion that Pollock & Co.
v.
Macrae 1922 SC (HL) 192 is no such authority and if the
latter case
of Mechans Ltd. v. Highland Marine Charters Ltd.
1964 S.C. 49 so decided,
it ought in my view not to be
followed.
The appellants tried to find an ambiguity in this clause in three ways.
(i) First they relied upon the
finding of the Lord Ordinary, with which
the Inner House generally
agreed, that there was such an inconsistency
between the
provisions of condition 2(a), excluding liability, and those
of
condition 2(f) as to create uncertainty as to the
meaning of the former
condition. It was this inconsistency which
led the courts below to conclude
against the validity of the
exclusion clause. So it was argued the same
inconsistency and the
doubts engendered by it must invalidate condition
2(f). But
this is transparently fallacious. Because clause A casts doubt
upon
the meaning of clause B, it does not follow at all that the converse
is
true and that clause B casts doubt upon the meaning of clause
A. Clause B
must be looked at on its own, and may turn out to be
perfectly clear. A
similar argument was presented as to an
inconsistency between clause 2(f)
and clause 4(i) and, in my
opinion, fails for the same reason.
(ii) It was contended that the
initial words " If, pursuant to the provisions
" set out
herein " are ambiguous and that their ambiguity invalidates
the
whole subclause. But I accept on this the conclusion of Lord
Dunpark
that the words are " open to construction " and
I agree on the construction
which he prefers. The possibility of
construction of a clause does not
amount to ambiguity: that
disappears after the court has pronounced the
meaning.
(iii) There is an inconsistency
between subclauses 2(f)(i)(a) and (b) so that
it
is impossible to arrive at a figure of limitation clearly expressed.
There-
fore, it is said, no limitation has effectively been made.
I reproduce these
subclauses:
" (i) in the case of all
services other than the Special Delivery
Service
" (a) Not
exceeding £1,000 in respect of any one claim arising
"
from any duty assumed by the Company which involves
" the
operation, testing, examination, or inspection of the
"
operational condition of any machine, plant or equipment
" in
or about the customer's premises, or which involves
" the
provision of any service not solely related to the
"
prevention or detection of fire or theft;
" (b) Not
exceeding a maximum of £10,000 for the
" consequences
of any incident involving fire theft or any
" other cause of
liability in the Company under the terms
" thereof;
" and further provided that
the total liability of the Company
" shall not in any
circumstances exceed the sum of £10,000 in
" respect of
all and any incidents arising during any consecutive
" period
of twelve months."
For my part I find these clauses,
though intricate, perfectly clear. Subclause
(a) limits
any one claim; subclause (b) limits any aggregate of
claims the
consequences of any one incident; the proviso limits
the total liability of
Securicor in respect of incidents arising
in any period of 12 months. The
clauses may overlap, in the sense
that more than one may apply: they may
3
give rise to difficulty, e.g.
if the total liability is exhausted early in the 12
months
period, and other claims arise. But I cannot find any ambiguity
in
them, notably in relation to the present case. And this answers
the second
question. I have no doubt that subclause (a)
applies so as to limit individual
claims to £1,000 each.
There is no question here of applying subclause (b).
For
these reasons I would dismiss the appeals.
Lord Elwyn-Jones
My Lords,,
I have had the advantage of
reading in draft the speeches of my noble
and learned friends.
Lord Wilberforce and Lord Fraser of Tullybelton.
For the reasons
they have given I would refuse the appeal and I agree that
the
respondents must have their costs in this House.
Lord Salmon
My Lords,
I have had the advantage of
reading the speeches of my noble and learned
friends, Lord
Wilberforce and Lord Fraser of Tullybelton. Although I
consider
that Securicor's contract was deplorably drafted, I agree for
the
reasons stated by my noble and learned friends that the appeal
must be
dismissed.
Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
My Lords,
The only surviving issue in these
appeals is whether the respondents
(" Securicor ") have
succeeded in limiting their liability under a contract
between
themselves and the Aberdeen Fishing Vessel Owners'
Association
Limited (" the Association ") who were
acting on behalf of a number of
owners of fishing vessels,
including the appellants. Nothing turns upon the
fact that the
appellants were not themselves a party to the contract and I
shall
proceed as if the contract had been made with them.
The appellants were the owners of
the fishing vessel " Strathallan " which
sank while
berthed in Aberdeen Harbour on 31st December 1971, at a time
when
Securicor were bound, under the contract with the Association,
to
provide security cover in the Harbour. Her gallows fouled the
vessel
moored next to her on the starboard side, called the "
George Craig ", which
also sank. Both vessels became total
losses. Two actions were then raised.
In one the appellants
claimed damages from the owners of " George Craig "
as
first defenders and from Securicor as second defenders. In the other
the
owners of the " George Craig " claimed damages from
the appellants, who
brought in Securicor as a third party. The
Lord Ordinary (Lord Wylie)
held that the loss of both vessels had
been caused by breach of contract and
negligence on the part of
Securicor. He found them liable to the appellants
in damages for
the loss of the " Strathallan ", and found them liable
to
relieve the appellants of their full liability to the owners of
the " George
" Craig " for the loss of that vessel.
He assessed the damages in each case
at a little over £55,000.
The Lord Ordinary rejected arguments on behalf
of Securicor to the
effect that their liability was either wholly excluded, or
limited
in amount, by the terms of their contract. Securicor
reclaimed
against the Lord Ordinary's judgment but they did not
contest his findings
of breach of contract and negligence. Their
contention on the reclaiming
motion was solely that their
liability had been either excluded or limited
by the terms of the
contract. The First Division of the Court of Session
(the Lord
President, Lord Cameron and Lord Dunpark) allowed the
reclaiming
motion in part, holding that liability had been limited in amount
but
that it had not been excluded. The appellants now appeal to
your
Lordships' House against that decision insofar as it held
that liability had
been limited.
4
In order to appreciate the
contentions of the parties, it is necessary to
refer briefly to
the circumstances in which the contract came to be made.
Until
31st December 1971 Securicor had for some months been providing
a
security service for vessels of owners represented by the
Association.
They did so under a contract dated 12th May 1971,
under which the service
was limited to vessels berthed at the
Albert Quay in Aberdeen Harbour, and
operated only during the
nights and at weekends. The main object was
to prevent intruders
from boarding unmanned vessels and damaging them
or stealing from
them. Early on 31st December an official of the Association
realised
that the service would not be adequate for the New Year
period,
partly because there were many more vessels than usual in
the harbour and
partly because they would be remaining there for
several days. Owing to
the unusual number of vessels they could
not all be berthed at Albert
Quay, where the security patrols were
already provided during certain
hours, and some of them would have
to be berthed at the Fish
Market/Commercial Quay ("the Fish
Market area"). The quay in the
Fish Market area was of open
structure, and there was a special risk that
vessels might slide
under the deck of the quay and become caught or
" snubbed "
by the bow. The risk arose especially on a rising tide. That
was
just what happened to the appellants' vessel the " Strathallan
", during
the evening of 31st December, 1971, and caused her
to sink taking the
" George Craig " with her. As
Securicor accept the Lord Ordinary's findings
of fault against
them, it is unnecessary to refer in greater detail to the
events
of that evening. Securicor also accept the decision of the
First
Division that the liability was not wholly excluded by the
contract.
The question whether Securicor's
liability has been limited falls to be
answered by construing the
terms of the contract in accordance with the
ordinary principles
applicable to contracts of this kind. The argument for
limitation
depends upon certain special conditions attached to the
contract
prepared on behalf of Securicor and put forward in their
interest. There
is no doubt that such conditions must be construed
strictly against the
proferens, in this case Securicor, and that
in order to be effective they must be
" most clearly and
unambiguously expressed " —see Pollock & Co. v.
Macrae
1922 SC (HL) 192, 199 per Lord Dunedin. Pollock
was a decision on an
exclusion clause but insofar as it
emphasised the need for clarity in clauses
to be construed contra
proferentem it is in my opinion relevant to the
present case
also. It has sometimes apparently been regarded as laying
down, as
a proposition of law, that a clause excluding liability can
never
have any application where there has been a total breach of
contract, but I
respectfully agree with the Lord President who
said in his opinion in the
present case that that was a
misunderstanding of Pollock. Pollock was
followed by the
Second Division in Mechans Limited v. Highland
Marine
Charters Limited 1964 S.C. 49 and there are passages in
the judgments in
that case which might seem to treat Pollock as
having laid down some
such general proposition of law, although it
is not clear that they were so
intended. If they were I would
regard them as being erroneous. Mechans
appears to have
been relied upon by counsel for the appellants before the
Second
Division, but was not relied on in this House.
There are later authorities which
lay down very strict principles to be
applied when considering the
effect of clauses of exclusion or of indemnity—
see
particularly the Privy Council case of Canada Steamship Lines Ltd.
v.
The King [1952] AC 192, 208, where Lord Morton of
Henryton, delivering
the advice of the Board, summarised the
principles in terms which have
recently been applied by this House
in Smith v. U.M.B. Chrysler (Scotland)
Ltd. 1978 SC (HL) 1. In my opinion these principles are not applicable
in
their full rigour when considering the effect of clauses merely
limiting
liability. Such clauses will of course be read contra
proferentem and must
be clearly expressed, but there is no
reason why they should be judged by
the specially exacting
standards which are applied to exclusion and indemnity
clauses.
The reason for imposing such standards on these clauses is
the
inherent improbability that the other party to a contract
including such a
clause intended to release the proferens from a
liability that would otherwise
fall upon him. But there is no such
high degree of improbability that he
5
would agree to a limitation of the
liability of the proferens, especially when,
as explained in
condition 4(i) of the present contract, the potential losses
that
might be caused by the negligence of the proferens or its
servants are so
great in proportion to the sums that can
reasonably be charged for the
services contracted for. It is
enough in the present case that the clause
must be clear and
unambiguous.
The contract was arranged during
the morning of 31st December, 1971
in some haste. It is set out on
a form partly printed and partly filled in
in ink, which is headed
" Temporary Contract or Contract Change Request"
and in
which the Association " request Securicor Ltd. to carry out
the
" services detailed below subject to the Special
Conditions printed overleaf."
The form requested "
continuous security cover for your (sic) vessels from
" 19.00
hours on 31/12/71 until 07.00 hours on 5/1/72" and stated
that
the area covered was to be extended to include the Fish
Market area.
Nothing turns upon that part of the contract but I
should mention that the
appellants contended that this temporary
contract, so long as it was in
operation, entirely superseded the
contract of 12th May 1971 and was the
sole measure of parties'
rights and obligations to one another. Having
regard to condition
8 of the Special Conditions, I see no reason to question
that
contention.
The " Special Conditions of
Contract" were elaborate and are applied
to services of
several types. So far as this appeal is concerned, the part
which
is most directly applicable is condition 2, and especially paragraph
(f)
of that condition. Paragraph 2(f) is in the
following terms: —
" (f) If, pursuant to
the provisions set out herein, any liability on the
" part of
the Company shall arise (whether under the express or
"
implied terms of this Contract or at Common Law, or in any
"
other way) to the customer for any loss or damage of whatever
"
nature arising out of or connected with the provision of, or
"
purported provision of, or failure in provision of, the services
"
covered by this Contract, such liability shall be limited to the
"
payment by the Company by way of damages of a sum:
" (i) In the case of all services other than the Special Delivery
" Service
" (a) Not
exceeding £1,000 in respect of any one claim arising
"
from any duty assumed by the Company which involves
" the
operation, testing, examination, or inspection of the
"
operational condition of any machine, plant or equip-
" ment
in or about the customer's premises, or which
" involves the
provision of any service not solely related
" to the
prevention or detection of fire or theft;
" (b) Not
exceeding a maximum of £10,000 for the consequences
"
of any incident involving fire, theft or any other cause
" of
liability in the Company under the terms hereof; and
"
further provided that the total liability of the Company
"
shall not in any circumstances exceed the sum of £10,000
"
in respect of all and any incidents arising during any
"
consecutive period of twelve months."
On behalf of the appellants it was
argued that that paragraph, even if
apparently clear in its own
terms, is not applicable when read in the context
of the contract
as a whole, where there has been a total failure to perform
the
services contracted for or what is sometimes called a total failure
of
contract, and that this was such a case. It was said that
clause 2(f) must
be qualified by the opening words of
condition 2 and of clause (a) of that
condition which show
that liability can only arise for some fault in the
course of
providing the services contracted for, and not where there has
been
a total failure to provide the service. I cannot accept that
submission,
because clause 2(f) expressly states that it
applies to liability arising out
of " the provision of, or
purported provision of, or failure in provision of "
the
services contracted for. If this submission had not been so
persuasively
presented, I would have thought it to be unarguable
in face of the provisions
of clause (f).
6
The learned judges of the First
Division found that this was a case of
total failure or total
breach of contract, in the sense of Lord Dunedin's
speech in
Pollock, supra. As that is the finding most favourable to
the
appellants on this part of the case it is not now material to
consider whether
this is strictly a case of total failure. If the
question had been material at
this stage I would have wished to
give it further consideration, because
there is no suggestion that
the security cover was not duly maintained
during the evening of
31st December 1971 in the Albert Dock area, which
was part of the
area covered by the temporary contract, and I think there
is much
to be said for the view that the contract was performed in part.
But
it is not necessary to come to a decision on that point.
A further argument for the
appellants was that clause (f) of condition 2
applied only
to liability which arose " pursuant to " the provisions of
the
contract, and that pursuant to meant " in accordance with
the express
" provisions of the contract." This meaning
was said to be emphasised
by the first sentence of clause 4(iii).
But that argument fails, in my opinion,
if for no other reason
than that clause (f) itself proclaims unambiguously
that it
applies to liability which shall arise under the " express or
implied "
terms of the contract. Next, the appellants argued
that there is an incon-
sistency between clause (a) of
condition 2 which purports to exclude
liability altogether and
clause (f) which purports to limit the amount of
liability
in certain cases. The existence of that inconsistency was one of
the
reasons for the First Division's decision that the exclusion clause
was
lacking in clarity, and counsel sought to apply the same
argument in reverse
to the limitation clause. But the argument is
in my opinion unsound. It
is one thing to say, as the First
Division did, that when you find a provision
for limiting
liability coming after a provision which is capable of being
read
as excluding liability altogether, the limitation provision casts
doubt
on the meaning of the earlier one. But it is quite a
different thing to say
that the inconsistency casts doubt on the
meaning of the limitation clause.
If the exclusion clause had
succeeded in its purpose, the limitation might
have been
unnecessary, but its meaning as a sort of long stop is in my
opinion
clear and is not affected by the existence of the exclusion clause.
A separate argument was advanced
to the effect that paragraph (f) was
confused and uncertain
in itself because the provisions of sub-paragraphs
(i)(a)
and (b) did not make it clear whether the limit of
liability in any
particular case was £1,000 or £10,000.
Perhaps the intention of sub-
paragraphs (a) and (b)
may not be immediately clear on first reading to a
person
unfamiliar with provisions of this sort, but a very little
consideration
is enough to show, in my opinion, that the meaning
is that explained by the
learned judges of the First Division.
Sub-paragraph (a) relates to any claim
arising
in any of the ways there mentioned and it limits the liability
of
Securicor to £1,000 for each claim. Sub-paragraph (b)
relates to any one
incident and limits their liability
to £10,000 in respect of each incident. The
two provisions
overlap but they are in no way inconsistent. For example,
in the
present case the owner of each of the vessels has a separate
claim
which, if the clause is applicable, will be limited to
£1,000. But both
claims arise out of one incident, and if
there had been more than ten claims
for £1,000 each arising
out of the same incident, the total liability of
Securicor would
have been limited to £10,000. That meaning is in my
view
clear and unambiguous and I reject this argument.
Having considered these particular
criticisms of paragraph (f) the question
remains whether in
its context it is sufficiently clear and unambiguous to
receive
effect in limiting the liability of Securicor for its own negligence
or
that of its employees. In my opinion it is. It applies to any
liability
" whether under the express or implied terms of
this contract, or at common
" law, or in any other way."
Liability at common law is undoubtedly
wide enough to cover
liability including the negligence of the proferens itself,
so
that even without relying on the final words " any other way ",
I am
clearly of opinion that the negligence of Securicor is
covered.
For these reasons I would refuse
the appeal. The respondents must have
their costs in this House.
7
Lord Lowry
My Lords,
I have had the opportunity of
reading in draft the speeches of my noble
and learned friends,
Lord Wilberforce and Lord Fraser of Tullybelton.
There is nothing which I can
usefully add, since I entirely agree with
their reasoning and
conclusions and with the order proposed.
I, too, would dismiss the appeal
313684 Dd 8208150 C2 11/81