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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 >> Standard Steamship Owners' Protection and Indemnity Association (Bermuda) Ltd. v GIE Vision Bail & Ors [2004] EWHC 2919 (Comm) (15 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2004/2919.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2919 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Standard Steamship Owners' Protection and Indemnity Association (Bermuda) Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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G. I. E Vision Bail and others |
Defendant |
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Stephen Kenny (instructed by Clyde & Co.) for the Fifteenth Defendant, Silver Waves Shops Limited
Hearing dates: 3rd, 8th and 9th December 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Cooke:
Background
"Disputes and differences
The Member hereby submits to the jurisdiction of the High Court of Justice of England in respect of any action brought by the Club to recover any sums which the Club may consider to be due to it from a Member. Without prejudice to the foregoing the Club shall be entitled to commence and maintain any action to recover any sums which the Club may consider to be due to it from a Member in any jurisdiction."
The issues
The Club Rules
"Applicant means any person seeking to enter a ship on his own or another's behalf or on whose behalf an application is made.
Entered Ship means a ship which has been entered in the Club for any of the risks enumerated herein in the manner provided under these Rules.
Entered Tonnage means the tonnage on the basis of which a ship is entered for insurance in the Club; and Entered Ton refers to the unit of such tonnage.
Member means every owner or other person who becomes and is for the time being a Member of the Club and more particularly of the Protection and Indemnity Class of the Club as hereinafter provided and as provided in the Bye-Laws.
Owner includes an owner, owners in partnership, owners holding separate shares in severalty, a part owner, and a trustee, mortgagee, charterer, operator or manager, builder, insurer or reinsurer who enters a chip in the Club or who is a Principal Assured, Joint Entrant or a Co-assured.
Insurance
2.1 These Rules, which are subject to the Act and the Bye-Laws, contain the terms upon which the Protection and Indemnity Class of the Club conducts its business. The Protection and Indemnity insurance given by the Club shall be in accordance with these Rules.
Governing Law
2.2 These Rules and any contract of insurance between the Club and a Member or any other person claiming under these Rules shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English Law. In particular they are subject to and incorporate the provisions of the Marine Insurance Act, 1906, of the United Kingdom and any statutory modifications thereof except insofar as such Act or modification may have been excluded by these Rules or by any term of such contract.
Entry
4.1 The Managers may in their discretion, and without giving any reason, refuse any application for the entry of a ship in the Club whether or not the applicant is already a Member of the Club.
4.2 Each person whose entry has been accepted under the Rules agrees with the Club for himself, his heirs, executors, administrators, assigns and successors that both he and they and each and all of them are bound by and will observe and perform the obligations under these Rules. Each such person shall furnish the Club with an address for the service of notices. In the case of a Member the address shall be deemed to be the address appearing in the Register of Members.
4.3 The Managers shall be at liberty to accept entries from those not already Members. If an application is accepted such person shall become a Member unless the Managers in their discretion decide that he is not to be a Member. Whenever the Managers accept an entry by way of reinsurance, they may in their discretion decide that the insurer reinsured by the Club or person insured by such an insurer or both shall become a Member or that neither of them shall become a Member and the Managers may accept the application on either such basis.
4.4 Where a person whose entry has been accepted under the Rules has not become a Member of the Club, he shall have the same rights and obligations under these Rules (but not under the Bye-Laws) as though he were a Member, and all such rights and obligations shall apply to him.
Application for entry
6.1 Every applicant shall apply for an entry in such manner and form as the Managers may from time to time require.
6.3 An applicant warrants on his own behalf and on behalf of any other person entitled under these Rules that he has furnished all material particulars and information and that all such particulars and information are, so far as he knew or could with reasonable diligence ascertain, true and complete, and will remain so throughout the period of insurance. The particulars and information so furnished shall, if the entry of the relevant ship be accepted, be deemed to form the basis of the contract of insurance between the Member or applicant and the Club.
6.4 Before any application for entry is accepted by the Managers, the Managers shall agree in writing the terms and conditions that will apply to the entry if the application is accepted, including (without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing) the contribution to be paid to the Club, the commencement of cover, and the terms and conditions on which the ship is to be accepted.
Certificates of entry
7.1 As soon as reasonably practicable after the acceptance of an application for entry of a ship for insurance in the Club, the Managers shall issue to the Member in respect of such a ship a Certificate of Entry in such form as they may from time to time determine but so that such Certificate of Entry shall state the date of the commencement of the period of insurance and the terms and conditions (other than the sums payable to the Club) on which the vessel has been accepted for insurance.
Joint Entrants
8.1.1 The Managers may accept an application from a Member for another person or persons to become a Joint Entrant in respect of that Member's entry. In such a case, the Managers may agree that none, one or more such persons may become Members of the Club. Each Joint Entrant shall have an independent right of recovery from the Club in respect of any liabilities, costs or expenses arising out of a particular casualty or event.
8.1.2 In the event that the application is accepted by the Managers, the Member who has made the application shall be designated the Principal Assured and shall be the person who is deemed irrevocably to have full power and authority to act in the name of and/or on behalf of all the Joint Entrants, and neither the Club nor the Managers, their servants or agents, shall be liable in any other manner whatsoever to any Joint Entrant in the event that the Member did not, in fact, have such power and authority.
8.1.3 Unless otherwise agreed in writing with the Managers, the Member and all Joint Entrants shall be jointly and severally liable to pay all amounts due to the Club in respect of such entry.
8.1.5 In relation to any such application from a Member for any person or persons to become a Joint Entrant the Member and each Joint Entrant warrants that the Joint Entrant is, in relation to the entered ship, either: -
(i) interested in the operation, management or manning of an insured ship; or
(ii) the holding company or the beneficial owner of the person identified in the Certificate of Entry as the Principal Assured or of any person interested in the operation, management or manning of the entered ship; or
(iii) a mortgagee of the entered ship: or
(iv) the charterer of the entered ship.
PROVIDED ALWAYS THAT in relation to Rules 8.1 and/or 8.2:
(i) The receipt by the Member or any one Joint Entrant or Co-assured of any sums paid by the Club in respect of such an entry shall be sufficient discharge by the Club for the same;
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Group Entries
8.3.1 The managers may accept any entry on the basis that the ship is part of a Group Rating Agreement and assess contributions accordingly.
8.3.2 One person shall be designated Group Principal and any communication from or on behalf of the Club to the Group Principal shall be deemed to be within the knowledge of all members, Joint Entrants and Co-assureds in the Group, and any communication from and action taken by the Group Principal shall be deemed conclusively to be made with the full approval of any and all Members, Joint Entrants and Co-assureds within that Group.
…………….
16.2.2 Any limits on the cover provided by the Club and set out in a Member's Certificate of Entry or these Rules shall apply in the aggregate to the Member, and all Joint Entrants, Co-assureds, affiliated or associated companies or other persons, as if the ship had been entered by the Member only."
Principles of construction
"I approach the construction of these clauses applying English canons of construction, as I am required to do. ……. In applying canons of English construction to the relevant clauses, I think I am entitled to bear in mind, and I do, that the formal requirements of art. 17 of the Convention have been interpreted to mean that consent has to be clearly and precisely shown, and that any jurisdiction agreed for the purpose of art. 17 may be a derogation from the general rule contained in art. 2. In the case of genuine ambiguity or uncertainty as to the correct construction of such a jurisdiction clause I therefore consider that the English Court should resolve such ambiguity or uncertainty in favour of a construction which leaves the underlying jurisdiction required by art. 2 untouched."
Construction of the Rules
Article 23 of the Jurisdiction Regulation
1. If the parties, one or more of who is domiciled in a Member State, have agreed that a court or the courts of a Member State are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which have arisen or which may arise in connection with a particular legal relationship, that court or those courts shall have jurisdiction. Such jurisdiction shall be exclusive unless the parties have agreed otherwise. Such an agreement conferring jurisdiction shall be either:
(a) in writing or evidenced in writing; or
(b) in a form which accords with practices which the parties have established between themselves; or
(c) in international trade or commerce, in form which accords with a usage of which the parties are or ought to have been aware and which in such trade or commerce is widely known to, and regularly observed by, parties to contracts of the type involved in the particular trade or commerce concerned.
2. Any communication by electronic means which provides a durable record of the agreement shall be equivalent to "writing"."
"The decision of the European Court in Salotti v RUWA Polstereimaschinen GmbH [1976] ECR 1831 in which it was said that "Article 17 [of the Brussels Convention] imposes on the Court before which the matter is brought the duty of examining, first, whether the clause was conferring jurisdiction upon it was in fact the subject of a consensus between the parties, which must be clearly and precisely demonstrated."
The exchanges between the parties
"Louis understands that the Club will not waive their responsibility for the premiums, despite any commercial arrangements which may have been agreed between Festival and Louis" (with regard to responsibility for those premiums).
Ferrari then forwarded that e-mail to Charles Taylor on May 2nd as Festival's instructions but adding the words: -
"We need to name Louis Duty Free as Joint in all the Festival entries which please confirm you are doing."
"Louis Duty Free Concessions – A/C Festival
Further to previous correspondence we can confirm we are amending the Certificates of Entry for the Festival Fleet (ex Bolero) to name Louis as a Joint Entrant as requested.
Endorsements to be issued in due course and we thank you for your kind assistance".
Articles 12 – 14 of the Jurisdiction Regulation
1. Without prejudice to Article 11(3), an insurer may bring proceedings only in the courts of the Member State in which the defendant is domiciled, irrespective of whether he is the policyholder, the insured or a beneficiary.
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Article 13
The provisions of this Section may be departed from only by an agreement:
2. which allows the policyholder, the insured or a beneficiary to bring proceedings in courts other than those indicated in this section, or
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5. which relates to a contract of insurance insofar as it covers one or more of the risks set out in Article 14.
Article 14
The following are the risks referred to in Article 13(5):
1. any loss of or damage to:
(a) seagoing ships, installations situated offshore or on the high seas, or aircraft, arising from perils which relate to their use for commercial purposes;
(b) goods in transit other than passengers' baggage where the transit consists of or includes carriage by such ships or aircraft;
2. any liability, other than for bodily injury to passengers or loss of or damage to their baggage:
(a) arising out of the use or operation of ships, installations or aircraft as referred to in point 1(a) insofar as, in respect of the latter, the law of the Member State in which such aircraft are registered does not prohibit agreements on jurisdiction regarding insurance of such risks;
(b) for loss or damage caused by goods in transit as described in point 1(b);
3. any financial loss connected with the use or operation of ships, installations or aircraft as referred to in point 1(a), in particular loss of freight or charter-hire;
4. any risk or interest connected with any of those referred to in points 1 to 3."
Defence cover
"Here follows the self explanatory message from Festival with their instructions in respect of the above. ……. We need to name Louis Duty Free as Joint in all the Festival entries would you please confirm you are doing."
10 December 2004.