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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Compania Sud Americana De Vapores SA v Sinochem Tianjin Ltd (Aconcagua) [2010] EWCA Civ 1403 (09 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/1403.html Cite as: [2011] 1 Lloyd's Rep 683, [2010] 2 CLC 897, [2010] EWCA Civ 1403, [2011] BLR 101 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
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COMPANIA SUD AMERICANA DE VAPORES S.A. |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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SINOCHEM TIANJIN LIMITED (FORMERLY SINOCHEM TIANJIN IMPORT AND EXPORT CORP) "ACONCAGUA" |
Appellant |
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Mr Simon Rainey QC (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 15th November 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Longmore:
Introduction
i) CSAV's case was that the cargo had, unknown to CSAV, an abnormally high thermal instability, being prone to self-heat at ordinary carriage temperatures. As a result the cargo, in its container, exploded on board the vessel at temperatures which were ordinarily to be expected onboard the vessel during the voyage.
ii) Sinochem's case was that the heating of the bunker tank on the voyage was either the (or a) cause of the explosion.
iii) CSAV contended in response that the stowage of the cargo next to a bunker tank which was heated on the voyage was of no causative significance. The contribution made by the heating of the bunkers to the warming of the container and its contents was wholly insufficient to have had any significant effect on, and made no difference to, the outcome.
i) that the judge held Sinochem liable to CSAV merely because he rejected Sinochem's primary case that the explosion was caused by exposure to excessive heating and that he was wrong to so hold because the explosion could have been caused by some other (unknown) factor;
ii) that, to the extent that the judge relied on factors other than his rejection of Sinochem's primary case, his reliance on such factors was misplaced;
iii) that, accordingly, CSAV had failed to prove their case that, in breach of contract, Sinochem had shipped a dangerous cargo.
Construing the Judgment
i) that CSAV did not know nor should it have known that UN 1748 could explode if the Critical Ambient Temperature ("CAT") was 40° Celsius or less;
ii) that Professor Gray's testing of samples from the Jingang factory (but not of the cargo actually shipped) suggested that CH from Jingang would, on occasion be rogue material. Moreover, the calculations made by Professor Gray for the purposes of the trial and based on a hotter heating regime than that prevailing on the "Aconcagua" ("the back calculations") established that the material actually shipped was likely to have had an abnormally low CAT – somewhere between mid 20s – low 30s Celsius.
iii) that the Jingang factory had poor manufacturing standards and inadequate quality control.
Assessment and testing of Jingang samples
i) widely variable results in respect of moisture, chlorine content and time taken before the samples would ignite (para 180-182);
ii) particulate contamination with a rust like appearance (para 180);
iii) activation energies and thermo-kinetic characteristics different from those of other normal material (para 214).
These factors suggested both that the Jingang factory might produce rogue material (para 224) and that there was poor quality control at the factory (para 230) which meant that calcium hypochlorite from Jingang "was liable to" include from time to time a rogue batch of unusually low thermal stability.
"The results obtained from Professor Gray's testing of the Jingang samples suggest that CH from that source would, on occasion, be rogue. The calculations carried out by Professor Gray, on the assumption of a bunker heating regime which was hotter than that which prevailed on the "Aconcagua" established to my satisfaction that the material shipped is likely to have fallen within the category and to have had an abnormally low CAT – somewhere in or around the mid to high 20s, or early 30s, far less than that which a prudent carrier would expect from UN 1748 and worse than the rogue UN 2880 investigated by Professor Gray. The nature of the evidence makes it impossible to be more definite. Even if the figure were out by a sizable fraction the CAT would still have been abnormally low."
And further at para 326
"In short, the evidence, taken as a whole, establishes that the CH shipped on the "Aconcagua" was a cargo of a dangerous nature of which CSAV neither had, nor ought to have had knowledge and that CSAV had not knowingly consented to the shipment of CH of such a nature."
"…[the judge] did not conclude that he must accept the defective cargo thesis willy nilly and even though evidence supporting it was defective or absent."
Although Mr Bright had other complaints to the effect that the judge should have addressed the question whether it was likely that every quadritainer of CH in the container had a CAT in the range of low 20s to high 30s degrees Celsius and that the judge had on occasion appeared to ignore the burden of proof, there was nothing in either of these grounds which are, in any event, peripheral to the main grounds of appeal. No expert suggested that it was necessary for every quadritainer to have an abnormally low CAT before an explosion could occur. I am, moreover, satisfied that the judge could not possibly have lost sight of the elementary principle that it was for the claimants to prove their case.
The Authorities
"I do not, however, accept that the evidence is in so unsatisfactory a state that the only just course is to leave the outcome of the case to the incidence of the burden of proof. Sinochem cannot say what exactly was shipped. It is, therefore, necessary to decide what inferences can be drawn from a consideration of the characteristics of other normal cargo and other Jingang material, the history of UN 1748 and UN 2880, and the temperature prevailing on the voyage, amongst other things,"
those other things being (as he had earlier explained) the poor quality control likely to have been exercised within the Jingang factory and Professor Gray's back calculations. In my judgment, therefore, the Popi M can have no effect on this appeal.
"There still remains the problem of identifying the boundary between those risks which the shipowner contracts to bear and those which he does not. One possibility is to draw the line by reference to the proper method of carriage. According to this view, a shipowner who consents to carry goods of a particular description contracts to perform the carriage in a manner appropriate to goods of that description, and thereby assumes all risks of accidents attributable to a failure to carry in that manner.
This is an attractive proposition, for it neatly solves the question of degree to which I have referred, and enables attention to be concentrated on the means adopted to carry the goods. If the carrier proves that he has used the appropriate means, the claim succeeds, without his having to engage in the often difficult tasks of establishing the precise character of the goods, and the precise respects and degree in which they deviated from the norm. Conversely, if his performance has fallen short of what is appropriate, in a manner which is causative of the loss, his claim must fail. This approach also has the theoretical merit of keeping attention focused on the carriage of the goods, which is the subject-matter of the contract from which the liability of both parties mainly, if not exclusively, arises.
This approach will be sufficient to deal with most problems relating to dangerous cargoes, for in respect of the great majority of goods, the normal precautions will suffice to eliminate the risk of carrying normal goods of the description stated in the contract. Leaving outside casualties from wholly extraneous causes, one can say that proper carriage and dangerous nature are opposite sides of the same coin.
There are, however, cases to which this simple analysis cannot be applied: i.e. those where the nature of the goods is such that even a strict compliance with the accepted methods of carriage will not suffice to eliminate the possibility of an accident. Whether consciously or not, seafarers and those who advise them have chosen to adopt methods of carriage which involve an element of risk. No doubt the risk could be eliminated, if those concerned were to provide complex equipment, and enforce rigorous standards of performance. But for practical reasons, they do not. The existence of this gap between acceptable carriage and safe carriage means that there may be cases where an accident is due, neither to the unusual cargo, nor to any short-comings in the carrier, but to simple bad luck.
Who is to bear the risk of accidents falling into this category? In my judgment, the risk must fall on the carrier. By contracting to carry goods of a specified description, he assents to the presence on his ship of goods possessing the attributes of the goods so described; and in the case under discussion, those attributes include the capacity to create dangers which the accepted methods are not always sufficient to overcome."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: