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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 >> Sang Stone Hamoon Jonoub Co Ltd v Baoyue Shipping Co Ltd "Bao Yue" [2015] EWHC 2288 (Comm) (31 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/2288.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2288 (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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SANG STONE HAMOON JONOUB CO LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BAOYUE SHIPPING CO LTD "BAO YUE" |
Defendant |
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Mr Neil Henderson (instructed by MFB Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 21-23 July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Males :
Introduction
The facts
a. The defendant time-chartered the vessel to Shanghai Hengxin Shipping Co Ltd ("Shanghai Hengxin") under a time charter dated 18 March 2011.b. Shanghai Hengxin voyage-chartered the vessel to a company called Ocean Mine Ltd ("Ocean Mine") by a fixture dated 7 December 2011.
c. Ocean Mine further voyage-chartered the vessel, on back-to-back terms, to Qisheng Resources Ltd ("Qisheng Resources") also by a fixture dated 7 December 2011. Qisheng Resources is part of a group of companies known as the Qisheng Group.
"Congen bill 94 to be used. In case original Bs/L would not be ready upon vessel's arrival at discharge port, Owners allow to discharge cargo upon arrival to custom bonded warehouse area against Charterer's single LOI with Owners P&I Club wording signed by Chrs.
Release cgo agnst original bill of lading. In the event cargo being kept in the warehouse in lieu of waiting for OBL to arrive at the discharge port, the expense of warehouse and all relevant costs to be for Chrtrs' account. …"
a. The total FOB price of the three cargoes was US $2,876,391.14, of which US $1,127,205.03 was for the "Bao Yue" cargo. Teda had already made payments of US $2,544,339.56, leaving a balance due of US $332,051.58. Thus Teda had already paid US $795,153.45 (or just over 70% of the FOB price) for the "Bao Yue" cargo as well as bearing the cost of freight to China.b. The claimant contended that Teda also owed it US $233,840 pursuant to the original 2009 contract.
"… Party A is entitled to refuse cargo releasing and to liquidate or otherwise dispose of such goods freight, by which it may offset any overdue charges owe to Party A under this Agreement."
"… Please kindly be notified that the buyer have not settled the proceed of this shipment to us as yet and hence the whole set of OB/L are resting with us waiting for buyer to pay us against the exchange of this document.
Trust you will take appropriate measures to prevent any inconvenience in future."
"Regarding your phone conversation saying that you are gonna to sell Qisheng's B/L, we have forwarded it to Qisheng, and Mr Lee said if you would sell the B/L, he would be definitely capable to keep the buyer of the B/L from acquiring the cargo. …"
"… I tried to get information from the shipping agent in Tianjin about the place where the cargo is being kept. They said they do not know but assured us that the initial buyer cannot release the cargo unless they produce the OBL."
"If you totally agree on refunding us the items of the funds we list above, we shall transfer the ownership of BAOYUE to your designated client, if not, then please present us its bs/l as soon as possible, otherwise the related demurrage charges shall be accumulating."
"… Qisheng discharged the goods in their own warehouse pointed, and which located in Dadaogangtang cross road of Tianjin, although we can use B/L to make clearance, however, it is quite difficult to get the goods out of warehouse, now we should investigate if the warehouse is their own or pointed, if possible to get out through some unusual way. Generally there will be some difficulties to solve the problem. …"
The claim for conversion
Conversion in general
"38. … Denial of title is not of itself conversion: see section 11(3) of the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977. To constitute conversion there must be a concomitant deprivation of use and possession. In support of this submission Mr Donaldson fastened upon a statement in Clerk & Lindsell on Torts, 17th ed (1995), p 636, paragraph 13-12:
'conversion is an act of deliberate dealing with a chattel in a manner inconsistent with another's right whereby that other is deprived of the use and possession of it.' (Emphasis added).
A similar passage appears in Salmond and Heuston on the Law of Torts, 21st ed (1996), pages 97-98. In the present case, it was said, none of the acts of IAC deprived KAC of use or possession of the aircraft. Some of IAC's acts were entirely abstract, such as applying for certificates of airworthiness. Even the physical acts, such as repainting or flying the aircraft, had no impact on KAC's possession.
39. In my view this line of argument was misconceived. I need not repeat the journey through the textbooks and authorities on which your Lordships were taken. Conversion of goods can occur in so many different circumstances that framing a precise definition of universal application is well nigh impossible. In general, the basic features of the tort are threefold. First, the defendant's conduct was inconsistent with the rights of the owner (or other person entitled to possession). Second, the conduct was deliberate, not accidental. Third, the conduct was so extensive an encroachment on the rights of the owner as to exclude him from use and possession of the goods. The contrast is with lesser acts of interference. If these cause damage they may give rise to claims for trespass or in negligence, but they do not constitute conversion.
40. The judicially approved description of the tort in Clerk and Lindsell encapsulates, in different language, these basic ingredients. The flaw in IAC's argument lies in its failure to appreciate what is meant in this context by 'depriving' the owner of possession. This is not to be understood as meaning that the wrongdoer must himself actually take the goods from the possession of the owner. This will often be the case, but not always. It is not so in a case of successive conversions. For the purposes of this tort an owner is equally deprived of possession when he is excluded from possession, or possession is withheld from him by the wrongdoer.
41. Whether the owner is excluded from possession may sometimes depend upon whether the wrongdoer exercised dominion over the goods. Then the intention with which acts were done may be material. The ferryman who turned the plaintiff's horses off the Birkenhead to Liverpool ferry was guilty of conversion if he intended to exercise dominion over them, but not otherwise: see Fouldes v Willoughby (1841) 8 M & W 540."
"It is not possible to categorise exhaustively all modes of conversion for while some acts are necessarily an absolute abrogation of the claimant's rights and deprive him of the whole value of his interest in the goods, there may be others where the courts retain a degree of discretion in deciding whether those acts amount to a sufficient deprivation. Nevertheless the principal ways in which a conversion may take place can be set out under the following headings, dealt with more fully below:
(a) when property is wrongfully taken or received by someone not entitled to do so;
(b) when it is wrongfully parted with;
(c) when it is lost by a bailee in breach of his duty to the bailor;
(d) when it is wrongfully sold, even without delivery, so as to pass good title to the buyer;
(e) when it is wrongfully retained;
(f) when it is wrongfully misused or destroyed; and
(g) when the defendant, without physically interfering with it, wrongfully denies access to it to the claimant."
Conversion by creation of a lien
"If a person take my horse to ride and leave him at an inn that is a conversion; for though I may have the horse on sending for him and paying for the keeping of him, yet it brings a charge on me."
"But in cases of long-term hire and hire-purchase, the owner impliedly authorises the hirer to deliver the subject matter to others for purposes, such as repair, which are reasonably incidental to the use contemplated even though they may give rise to a lien."
"In Gaudet v. Brown (Cargo ex "Argos") (1873) LR 5 PC 134 the authorities at Le Havre prevented the discharge of a cargo of petroleum. The shipowner found no nearer port where he could discharge the cargo and so took it back again to London. He was held entitled to his freight, backfreight and expenses, because the consignee was under a duty to discharge the cargo and the shipowner was under a duty to take care of the cargo in the circumstances which had arisen and he had acted reasonably. He could not throw the cargo into the sea, but he was not required to retain and preserve the cargo at his own expense. That was not a case where a lien was exercised, but the case illustrates the doctrine that a shipowner is entitled to be indemnified in contract and/or bailment for the reasonable expenses of dealing with a cargo where the consignee is unwilling or, as here, unable to perform his duty of discharging the cargo (at 161, 165)."
Conversion by denial of access
Other defences
"The Carrier shall in no case be responsible for loss of or damage to cargo arisen prior to loading and after discharging."
"Owners' Responsibility Clause
The Owners are to be responsible for loss of or damage to the goods or for delay in delivery of the goods only in case the loss, damage or delay has been caused by personal want of due diligence on the part of the Owners or their manager to make the Vessel in all respects seaworthy and to secure that she is properly manned, equipped and supplied, or by the personal act or default of the owners or their Manager.
And the Owners are not responsible for loss, damage or delay arising from any other cause whatsoever, even from the neglect or default of the Master or crew or some other person employed by the owners on board or ashore for whose acts they would, but for this Clause, be responsible, or from unseaworthiness of the vessel on loading or commencement of the voyage or at any time whatsoever."
The defendant's counterclaim for storage charges
The bill of lading
Conclusions
a. the claimant's claim for damages for conversion fails;b. there will be a declaration that the claimant is liable to reimburse the defendant for reasonable storage charges as and when paid to TQST, and that the amount of the defendant's reasonable liability to TQST up to 21 July 2015 amounts to US $2,146,763.11; and
c. the claimant must deliver the original bill of lading to the defendant to enable the cargo to be sold.