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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Nippon Yusen Kubishiki Kaisha v Golden Strait Corporation [2003] EWHC 16 (Comm) (17 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2003/16.html Cite as: [2003] 2 LLR 592, [2003] 2 Lloyd's Rep 592, [2003] EWHC 16 (Comm) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
NIPPON YUSEN KUBISHIKI KAISHA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GOLDEN STRAIT CORPORATION |
Defendant |
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Mr N. Hamblen QC and Mr D. Allen (instructed by Messrs Richards Butler) for the Defendants
Hearing date : 20 December 2002
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morison :
"CHARTERERS' OPTION FOR PERIOD:-
The Charterers shall have their option to charter back the Vessel to (GOL), the Owners' parent company, on the "back to back" basis upon completion of the first three (3) years Time Charter, but such option shall be declared not later than six (6) months prior to the expiry of three (3) years Time Charter.
Should the Charters elect to continue to timecharter the vessel beyond three (3) years, the Charters shall also have the option to charter back the vessel to GOL on the "back to back" basis upon completion of the first five (5) years Time Charterers, but such option shall be declared not later than six (6) months prior to the expiry of the five (5) years Time Charter.
All other terms, conditions and exceptions of the above dated Charter Party shall remain unchanged and in full force and effect."
"it was common ground between the Owners and the Charterers that the background to the transaction was that the Owners wanted to charter their vessel to an organisation such as the Charterers for seven (or, perhaps at the very least, five years) as this would facilitate the additional financing they required in order to take delivery from the yard. On the other hand, the Charterers required the vessel to fulfil commitments to a potential sub-charterer…for one to three years. They did not, however, wish to take the vessel on charter for seven years and wished to be able to redeliver the vessel after three or five years. The gulf between these two positions was then bridged by Matsui (ship brokers) in proposing a charter-back arrangement and this is what is addressed under the heading "Charterers Option for period"."
(1) In November 1999 the Owners sold the vessel to a German company and, by a sub-charter the Owners became charterers. The Charterers were a party to this new arrangement and the contractual arrangements agreed in 1998 continued to operate. In January 2000 GOGL and its subsidiary which indirectly owned the Owners sought Chapter 11 protection in USA. A reconstruction plan was put in place with the authority of the US Court whereby the three companies which directly or indirectly owned the Owners were merged into GOGL. GOL'S shares in GOGL were cancelled and new shares in GOGL were issued and acquired by an entity called Frontline. It is not known what has happened to GOL – presumably it does not own assets of any worth, but that is pure speculation. It transpires that at the end of the day nothing significant arises from the collapse and reconstruction of this part of the Golden Group. The Charterers do not say that because GOL is not the GOL that the parties contemplated at the date of the Contract, the Contract must be read in a particular way to accommodate the change. In essence, the Charterers say that the MOA gave them a right to re-deliver the vessel either at three or five years and thereby bring the Charter to an end. In support of their contention they rely upon what they contend is the proper construction of the contract.
(2) The Charterers sent a fax to Matsui in June 2001, referring to the changes in the Golden Ocean Group and to the option to charter back to the vessel to GOL "which has been acquired by frontline". They sought confirmation that instead they could charter the vessel back to Frontline, and, preferably drop out of the picture altogether. Frontline responded saying that they were aware of the option to charter back to GOL and waited to hear if the Charterers wished to exercise that option and that if they did so then new arrangements whereby the Charterers dropped out of the picture would make logical sense, although not permitted by the wording of the contract. The Charterers then made it clear that they were exercising their option and wished to terminate the 1999 agreement. In due course Frontline said they had become aware that GOL were not part of the Golden Ocean group which they had acquired and that the option to charter back was an option to charter back to GOL. Eventually on 21 November 2001 the Charterers gave the following notice to the owners:
"We … the Charterers hereby declare that we will re-deliver (the vessel) to the Owners, Golden Strait Corporation bearing in mind the non-existence of (GOL) the Owners' parent company on/around 15 December 2001, at Daesan, Korea pursuant to the terms and conditions of the (MOA)…"
The vessel was actually re-delivered on 14 December 2001 and three days later the Owners treated the re-delivery as a repudiatory breach of contract which they accepted.
(1) The MOA was, initially at least, a contract between the Owners and Charterers and to which GOL was not a party. The MOA cannot, therefore, have amounted to the grant of an option by GOL to take a charter "back". The fact that GOL later put their signature on the MOA at the Charterers' lawyers' request did not alter the position, as the MOA had to be interpreted as executed, and GOL were not expressed to be party to it.(2) The heading "option for period" suggested that the provision of a seven year term had been modified and this was re-enforced by the words "should the Charterers elect to continue to timecharter the vessel beyond three years" and by the reference to the "first three years" and "first five years" of the Time Charter. The language strongly suggests that the Charterers had an option (election) to continue or not continue the Charter and that each period was a separable and severable period of time. A charter "back" is the very converse of the concept of a sub-charter.
(3) The reference to GOL was to "indicate a level of guarantee or a right of nomination". What the designation of GOL and their description as the Owners' parent company does is to "provide flexibility for the "charter-back", not to limit to something that no-one in fact ever intended. The MOA was plainly directed to market risks, not insolvency risks."
(4) The words in the MOA that "all other terms and conditions" of the Charter Party "shall remain unchanged" demonstrates that the MOA was intended as a variation of the Charterparty including clauses 4 and 18. Clause 4 stipulates the period of hire as seven years; Clause 18 permits the Charterer to sub-charter but to remain liable to the Owners for due Fulfilment of the Charter. Reliance was also placed on clause 71 which required the Owners and Charterers to "mutually discuss to agree the Vessel's Hull & Machinery Insured Values in due course."
(5) The fixture memorandum also spoke of a charter back to the Owners which was, as the arbitrator said, tantamount to a redelivery – it was unlikely that the charterparty could survive a charter back to the owner just as a lease of property could not survive a charter back to the owner just as a lease of property could not survive the property's acquisition by the owner/lessor.
"this option was, as previously mentioned, a means by which to bridge the different positions of the two parties at the time of contracting and was intended to have a similar commercial result to redelivery. Up until the exercise of the option, the Charterers would have the full rights and obligations under the Charterparty as therein expressed but after the exercise of the option, those rights and obligations would have been passed on to GOL on a back to back basis so that Charterers could look to GOL for the entire performance of the Charterparty."