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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> OCM Maritime Nile LLC & Anor v Courage Shipping Co. & Ors [2022] EWCA Civ 1091 (29 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1091.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1091 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT
Sir Andrew Smith (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL, CIVIL DIVISION
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LORD JUSTICE MALES
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1) OCM MARITIME NILE LLC 2) OCM MARITIME KAMA LLC |
Respondents/Claimants |
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- and - |
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1) COURAGE SHIPPING CO. 2) AMETHYST VENTURES CO. 3) ORYX SHIPPING LIMITED |
Appellants/ Defendants |
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"COURAGE" / "AMETHYST" |
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Robert Bright QC & Charles Holroyd (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 21 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males:
(1) the owners terminated the charterparties lawfully and effectively by notices dated 18th June 2021;
(2) the owners were entitled to possession of the vessels;
(3) they had been so entitled since about 28th July 2021 in the case of Courage, while in the case of Amethyst they had lawfully taken possession of the vessel on or about 1st September 2021;
(4) the charterers had precluded themselves from seeking relief from forfeiture of the charterparties by their misconduct in and in relation to the proceedings; and
(5) in any event this would not have been an appropriate case in which to grant such relief.
The facts
The issues at the trial
The construction issue
The relevant terms
"(a) Charterers' Default
The Owners shall be entitled to withdraw the Vessel from the service of the Charterers and terminate the Charter with immediate effect by written notice to the Charterers if:
(i) The Charterers fail to pay hire in accordance with the provisions of this Charter
(ii) The Charterers fail to comply with the requirements of:
(1) Clause 6 (Trading Restrictions)
(2) Clause 13(a) (Insurance and Repairs)
provided that the Owners shall have the option, by written notice to the Charterers, to give the Charterers a specified number of days grace within which to rectify the failure without prejudice to the Owners' right to withdraw and terminate under this Clause if the Charterers fail to comply with such notice; ".
"In the event of the termination of this Charter in accordance with the applicable provisions of this CharterClause 28, the Owners shall have the right to repossess the Vessel from the Charterers at her current or next port of call or at sea, or at a port or place convenient to them without hindrance or interference by the Charterers, courts or local authorities. Pending physical repossession of the Vessel in accordance with this Clause 29, the Charterers shall hold the Vessel asgratuitousbailee only to the Owners and continue to maintain, class and insure the vessel as required by the terms of this Charter notwithstanding the termination of the chartering of the Vessel. ".
"(a) At any time after any circumstances described at Clause 45 (Events of Default) have occurred and are continuing, the Owners may, by notice to the Charterers, (aa) in the case of Clause 45(a), 14 days after the occurrence thereof or on such later date as the Owners shall specify and (bb) in all other cases immediately or on such date as the Owners shall specify, terminate the chartering by the Charterers of the Vessel under this Charter, whereupon the Owners may at their option (but with no obligation so to do):
(i) declare by notice given to the Charterers the aggregate amount of (i) the then Outstanding Principal and (ii) the Indemnity Sum to be immediately due and payable whereupon the same shall become immediately due and payable and the Charterers shall be obliged to pay the actual balance of the same to the Owners together with any interest in accordance with Clause 35(d) and the then applicable payment premium payable pursuant to Clause 34(i) as if the Outstanding Principal was being prepaid on the date of the Owners' notice; and/or
(ii) take any action at law and under the Relevant Documents to collect the full amount as mentioned in Clause 46(a)(i) above; and/or
(iii) unless the Charterers have paid to the Owners the full amount as mentioned in Clause 46(a)(i) above, by their agent or otherwise without further legal process, re-take the Vessel (wherever she may be)
(iv) unless the Charterers have paid to the Owners the full amount as mentioned in Clause 46(a)(i), declare by notice given to the Charterers that the Vessel should be promptly re-delivered by the Charterers to the Owners whereupon the Charterers shall be obliged to cause the Vessel to be re-delivered to the Owners
(v) unless that [sic] Charterers have paid to the Owners the full amount as mentioned in clause 46(a)(i), with or without re-taking possession of the Vessel to sell, lease or otherwise dispose of the Vessel
(b) If the Owners repossess the Vessel as contemplated by Clauses 29 (Repossession) and 46(a), the Owners shall be entitled to navigate the Vessel to a safe port within permitted insurance limits designated by the Owners
(d) No remedy referred to in this Clause 46 (Owners' Rights) is intended to be exclusive, but each shall be cumulative. Save as expressly stated in this Clause 46 (Owners' Rights), the exercise or purported exercise of any one remedy shall not prevent the simultaneous or later exercise of any other remedy nor shall it prevent the later exercise of the same remedy.
(f) The Owners and the Charterers each agree that the payment of the Outstanding Principal and the Indemnity Sum as set out at Clause 46(a)(i) above is a reasonable pre-estimate of the damages that will be suffered by the Owners from the termination of the chartering of the Vessel and represent liquidated damages and not a penalty ".
The judge's approach
(1) The owners' construction respected the wording of clause 46 itself because the clause made clear that the owner has an option, but not an obligation, to serve a notice under clause 46(a)(i).
(2) The words "unless the Charterers have paid to the Owners the full amount as mentioned in clause 46(a)(i)" in the succeeding paragraphs mean no more than that, if the owner has served a notice and the charterer has paid, the remedies in those paragraphs are not available to the owner.
(3) The owners' construction was harmonious with clause 29, which provides an unqualified right to possession in the event of termination, while the charterers' construction was not.
(4) The underlying purpose of the transaction as a financing arrangement to enable the charterers to acquire the vessels and to provide security for the money advanced by the owners (who were not themselves in the shipowning business) did not affect these conclusions: even on the charterers' construction, they would lose possession of the vessels if a clause 46(a)(i) notice was served and they failed to pay immediately the full amount outstanding.
(5) Even though the purpose of the transaction was to provide finance for the charterers' purchase of the vessels, the parties chose to give effect to that purpose by entering into bareboat charterparties, a standard feature of which is that they include a right for the owner to repossess the vessel in the event of termination; there is, therefore, nothing commercially remarkable about the consequences of the owners' construction.
(6) There could be circumstances in which, acting reasonably, the owners would prefer to take possession of the vessel in response to an Event of Default rather than to serve notice under clause 46(a)(i) and take the outstanding payment, breach of a sanctions regime being only one example in which the owners might be unable, or might reasonably not wish, to take payment from the charterers.
Decision
Relief against forfeiture
The claim for relief
"(i) Before Mr Mallah's listing, the Defendants had performed the charterparties without complaint from the Claimants and without any issues arising between the parties.
(ii) The Events of Default stem from Mr Mallah being placed on the SDN list, which was 'wrongful', and they involved no fault or culpability on the part of the Defendants; and Mr Mallah has applied for his name to be removed from the list.
(iii) Mr Mallah's listing does not prevent or make it unlawful for the Claimants to perform the charterparties since Mr Mallah is no longer a director or officer of the Defendants, and he does not own them. In any case, an application could be made to OFAC to permit the parties to perform the charterparties.
(iv) The Defendants will suffer irremediable prejudice if the charterparties are terminated and the vessels repossessed. Correspondingly, if the charterparties are terminated and the vessels repossessed, the Claimants will receive unwarranted windfalls."
Is relief against forfeiture available in principle?
"156. In this case, the chartering arrangements were a mechanism whereby the Oaktree Group provided finance to the Defendants, and if the arrangements went to plan, the Defendants were to possess the vessels until they bought them from the Claimants. In More OG Romsdal Fylkesbatar AS v The Demise Charterers of the Ship "Jotunheim", [2004] EWHC 671, Cooke J observed that 'in a bareboat charter which is also a hire/purchase agreement, the owners provide the ship in anticipation that they will do nothing further after delivery. They receive the charterers' payments and, if all goes well, will transfer the vessel to the charterers on receipt of the final instalment' (at para 50). He decided that he therefore had jurisdiction to grant relief from forfeiture relief [sic], although on the facts he decided not to grant it. I agree with Cooke J, and conclude that the Defendants' rights under the charterparties are of a kind that can be protected by relief from forfeiture."
The charterers' misconduct
"158. The criticisms of Defendants' response to Court orders and compliance with undertakings to the Court include these:
(i) The AIS and other tracking systems of the 'Courage' and the 'Amethyst' were switched off on 25 and 26 June 2021 respectively. By her orders of 20 August 2021, Cockerill J ordered that the Defendants 'forthwith' cause the vessels' AIS system and other tracking and communication systems to be switched on to allow the Claimants to track their positions. The orders were emailed that same day to the Defendants. The Defendants did not restore the beacons until 23 August 2021.
(ii) With regard to the 'Courage', on 20 August 2021, Cockerill J prohibited CSC and Oryx from entering or remaining within areas excluded by the charterparty, which included Syrian waters. The 'Courage' entered Syrian waters on 23 September 2021. I reject the explanation that she drifted there without power, and conclude that she was moved there under her own power. CSC and Oryx also failed to comply with the orders or 20 August 2021 and 27 August 2021, that the vessel be taken to Gibraltar or another port to be agreed between the parties.
(iii) CSC and Oryx, in breach of the order of Foxton J of 29 September 2021, have not procured that the 'Courage' be towed to Piraeus, Greece as soon as reasonably practicable. She remains in Lakatia. I cannot accept that the Defendants have attempted to move her to Piraeus, and I reject the explanation that she was not towed there because the Defendants failed in genuine efforts to find a tug or to obtain permission from the Syrian authorities. Had there been proper efforts, they would have been evidenced by disclosable documents.
(iv) On 20 August 2021, Cockerill J ordered that AVC 'forthwith upon the arrival of [OCM Kama's] duly authorised representatives and/or surveyors, allow such representatives and/or surveyors access to carry out a survey of the Vessel and ascertain the state of the Vessel's maintenance'. When Mr Mangos and Captain Kolosioulis arrived at the vessel on 28 August 2021, they were obstructed by the Master of the 'Rival', who, I infer, was acting on the Defendants' instructions, and were ordered to leave by Mr Mallah, who again was acting for the Defendants. Mr Dunning described the effect of this as 'trivial' because Mr Mangos and Captain Kolosioulis conducted an inspection between 29 and 31 August 2021, but that does not excuse breach of the Court's order.
(v) AVC and Oryx did not discontinue the proceedings for precautionary seizure of the 'Amethyst' in the Courts of Sharjah in breach of their undertaking to Foxton J. On the contrary, on 6 October 2021 they served the Claimants with a court document dated 30 September 2021 by way of an appeal against the refusal of their application by the Court of First Instance.
159. Except with regard to the delay in switching on the AISs, where Mr Chiotelis offered the rather limp excuse of his holiday, the Defendants have not provided any credible explanation for the breaches, or offered any apology for them.
160. Further, the Defendants, as I conclude, provided misleading and untruthful information to the Court in the course of the interlocutory proceedings:
(i) In his witness statement of 24 August 2021, Mr Chiotelis said that the 'Amethyst' was under orders to load cargo at Ruwais or Sohar. I cannot accept that statement in view of Captain Subaan, as he told Mr Mangos, knowing nothing of such orders. I also observe that the evidence of Mr Chiotelis was misleading in that he said that the sub-charterparty of the 'Amethyst' gave the option of a five months extension, without referring to Addendum No 2, but that that might have been an unintended error, and I attach no weight to it.
(ii) The complaint about the evidence that the 'Amethyst' was under orders is aggravated because on 24 September 2021, in response to the Claimants'' criticisms of it, Andrew Baker J gave the opportunity for corrective witness statements to be served. The evidence was not corrected, nor were the criticisms answered.
(iii) Andrew Baker J was told on 24 September 2021 that the 'Courage' had drifted into Syrian waters due to weather conditions, and this account was repeated in the affidavit of Mr Chiotelis of 27 September 2021, on the basis of information, he said, that he was given by Captain Khalil. I reject that account as untruthful."
"161. I have rejected the Defendants' contention and have concluded that the beneficial interest in the Defendants was not transferred to the four buyers. The Defendants cannot have advanced their case about the beneficial ownership as a result of some misunderstanding: it was a deliberate attempt to mislead the Court."
The judge's approach to relief against forfeiture on the merits
"189. I therefore conclude that there is little prospect that the Claimants would be granted licences to permit them to give effect to an order for relief from forfeiture, and that, if I were to grant relief from forfeiture, any order would put the Claimants and US persons associated with them at risk of penalties under the sanctions regime if they complied with it. This is a powerful reason to refuse the Defendants' application for relief. "
The charterers' submissions on appeal
Decision
Disposal
Lord Justice Newey
Lord Justice Underhill