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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 >> Cottonex Anstalt v Patriot Spinning Mills Ltd [2014] EWHC 236 (Comm) (14 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/236.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 236 (Comm), [2014] 1 Lloyd's Rep 615 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Cottonex Anstalt |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Patriot Spinning Mills Ltd |
Defendant |
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Philippa Hopkins (instructed by Watson Farley) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 31 January 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
The Contract and the Bylaws and Rules
"5. Claims and controversial matters, that may occur in connection with the execution of the following contract, are to be solved by the representatives of the Buyer and Seller, having full power to act. All disputes relating to this contract will be resolved through Arbitration in accordance with the Bylaws of the International Cotton Association Limited. This agreement incorporates the Bylaws which set out the Association's Arbitration procedure"
(i) Section 1: Definitions and General Bylaws (which consist of Bylaw numbers 100 to 106);
(ii) Section 2: International Trading on Cost Insurance and Freight (CIF), Cost and Freight (CFR), Free on Board (FOB) and other similar terms (which consist of Bylaw numbers 200 to 203 and Rule numbers 200 to 240);
(iii) Section 3: Arbitration (which consists of Bylaw numbers 300 to 361); and
(iv) Section 4: General Administration (which consists of Bylaw numbers 400 to 421).
The Award
"As to ICA Bylaws and Rules
1. The TAC studied Bylaw 201, which is the first step in the Arbitration procedure, which states:
Subject to Bylaws 302 and 318, the following clauses will apply to every contract made under our Bylaws and Rules, or containing words to similar effect:
- The contract will incorporate the Bylaws and Rules of The International Cotton Association Limited as they were when the contract was agreed.
- If any contract has not been or will not be performed, it will not be as cancelled. It will be closed by being invoiced back to the seller under our Rules in force at the date of the contract.
- All disputes relating to the contract will be resolved through arbitration in accordance with the Bylaws of The International Cotton Association Limited. This agreement incorporates the Bylaws which set out the Association's arbitration procedure; and
- Neither party will take legal action over a dispute suitable for arbitration, other than to obtain security for any claim, unless they have first obtained an arbitration award from the International Cotton Association Limited and exhausted all means of appeal allowed by the Association's Bylaws.
Clause 5 of the contract in question, contains a copy of bullet point 3 above, and as such adding emphasis to this Bylaw, but not excluding the introductorily sentence covering all 4 bullet point that:
"the following clause will apply to every contract made under out Bylaws and Rules"
Furthermore we cite Bylaw 102 inter alia:-
If a contract is made under our Bylaws and Rules:
- all of the Bylaws in this book will apply to the contract and no amendment by the buyer and seller is allowed;
This indicates that neither party may alter in any way what is contained in the ICA Bylaws.
Clause 5 of the contract therefore cannot overrule the Bylaws. We therefore reason and find that the contact is subject to the Bylaws and Rules of the ICA."
(i) Bylaw 201 applies, and is the "the first step";
(ii) Bylaw 102 has the result that it is impermissible to contract out of Bylaw 201;
(iii) Pursuant to Bylaw 201, four bullet points are incorporated, and
(iv) The second of those bullet points provides that there must be invoicing back.
The question of law
"Whether a clause in a contract for the sale of raw cotton which provides that. 'All disputes relating to this contract will be resolved through Arbitration in accordance with the Bylaws of the International Cotton Association Limited. This agreement incorporates the Bylaws which set out the Association's arbitration procedure' incorporates the Rules of the International Cotton Association relating to contract closure and 'invoicing back' (viz. Rules 225 and 226.)"
"Whether the clause in the contract for the sale of raw cotton which provided that, 'All disputes relating to this contract will be resolved through Arbitration in accordance with the Bylaws of the International Cotton Association Limited. This agreement incorporates the Bylaws which set out the Association's arbitration procedure' incorporates the Rules of the International Cotton Association relating to contract closure and 'invoicing back' (viz. Rules 225 and 226)."
The Respondents' Notice
The admissibility of the documents
"12.5 Unless there is a dispute whether the question raised by the appeal is one which the tribunal was asked to determine, no arbitration documents may be put before the court other than
(1) the award; and
(2) any document (such as the contract or the relevant parts thereof) which is referred to in the award and which the court needs to read to determine a question of law arising out of the award.
In this Practice Direction "arbitration documents" means documents adduced in or produced for the purposes of the arbitration."
"12.15 The bundle for the hearing of any appeal should contain only the claim form, the respondent's notice, the arbitration documents referred to in paragraph 12.5, the order granting permission to appeal and the skeleton arguments.
The admissibility of the arguments
Extension of time
The answer to the question of law
The approach to issues of construction on an arbitration appeal
"1. The court should read an arbitral award as a whole in a fair and reasonable way. The court should not engage in minute textual analysis.
2. Where the arbitrator's experience assists him in determining a question of law, such as the interpretation of contractual documents or correspondence passing between members of his own trade or industry, the court will accord some deference to the arbitrator's decision on that question. The court will only reverse that decision if it is satisfied that the arbitrator, despite the benefit of his relevant experience, has come to the wrong answer."
The "Rainy Sky" and business common sense
"There has been considerable judicial exposition of these principles by the House of Lords and the Supreme Court in recent years [Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] 1 AC 1101; Re Sigma Finance Corp [2010] 1 All ER 571 and Rainy Sky SA v Kookmin Bank [2011] 1 WLR 2900] There is no point in my going over the same ground again at any length. The court's job is to discern the intention of the parties, objectively speaking, from the words used in the commercial document, in the relevant context and against the factual background in which the document was created. The starting point is the wording of the document itself and the principle that the commercial parties who agreed the wording intended the words used to mean what they say in setting out the parties' respective rights and obligations. If there are two possible constructions of the document a court is entitled to prefer the construction which is more consistent with "business common sense," if that can be ascertained. However, I would agree with the statements of Briggs J, in Jackson v Dear [2012] EWHC 2060 at [40] first, that "commercial common sense" is not to be elevated to an overriding criterion of construction and, secondly, that the parties should not be subjected to " the individual judge's own notions of what might have been the sensible solution to the parties' conundrum". I would add, still less should the issue of construction be determined by what seems like "commercial common sense" from the point of view of one of the parties to the contract."
The incorporation issue
" This agreement incorporates the Bylaws which set out the Association's Arbitration procedure."
"[t]he first rule relating to the incorporation of one document's terms into another is to construe the incorporating clause in order to decide on the width of the incorporation".
(i) The Bylaws and Rules form part of a single "Rule Book" entitled "Bylaws and Rules of the International Cotton Association Ltd.". If the parties had intended to incorporate only one part of that document and not the rest, they would have said so in clear terms.
(ii) So inter-linked are the Bylaws and Rules that they do not even merit a separate definition in the "Rule Book": see Bylaw 100.
(iii) The Bylaws taken without the Rules provide no more than a framework. The "meat" is in the Rules. Most of those Rules can be amended by the parties to a contract. Not surprisingly, therefore, the Rule Book does not appear to contemplate the possibility of a contract being made subject to the Bylaws, or some of them, but not the Rules: see e.g. Bylaw 100 and all the General Bylaws in Section 2.
(i) It would be decidedly odd to incorporate the arbitration provisions of the Bylaws and Rules but not the remaining provisions. Why would the parties have wished to submit to the jurisdiction of trade arbitrators used to applying the substantive provisions of their own institution without also agreeing to those substantive provisions?
(ii) If it is only the arbitration Bylaws that are incorporated, the Contract is decidedly thin. For example, there would be no provisions as to how sampling is to be carried out, or as to how quality is to be assessed, or as to the terms of any insurance. But all these are contained in the detailed Rules. The absence of such detail in the Contract is a good indicator that all the Bylaws and Rules were intended by the parties to be incorporated.
The appropriate order
"Patriot not entitled to the damages
No sums are, or can be due, to Patriot by Cottonex in this case. This is because (i) Cottonex is the innocent party and Patriot is the defaulting party and damages can only be awarded to an innocent party and (ii) the invoicing back provisions under the ICA Byelaws do not apply in this contract."
Conclusion