BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Kassiopi Maritime Co Ltd v Fal Shipping Co.Ltd [2015] EWHC 318 (Comm) (19 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/318.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 318 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Kassiopi Maritime Co Ltd |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Fal Shipping Co.Ltd |
Defendant |
____________________
Michael Davey QC (instructed by Bugden & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 5 February 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen:
Introduction
(1) The port log and time sheets kept as referred to in the Letters of Protest;
(2) A manuscript note on an email, made by Captain Karalexis, that the Master had received free practique by VHF at Port Sudan.
The Charterparty
"Demurrage rate :USD 17,000 PDPR
LAYTIME :TTL 84 Hrs SHINC
BPVOY4
6. Notice of Readiness ("NOR")
6.3 Notwithstanding tender of a valid NOR by the Vessel such NOR shall not be effective, or become effective, for the purposes of calculating laytime, or if the Vessel is on demurrage, demurrage unless and until the following conditions have been met
6.3.2 in the case of the Vessel not berthing upon arrival and being instructed to anchor, she has completed anchoring at Anchorage where the vessels of her type customarily anchored at the port or, if she has been instructed to wait, she has reached the are with in the port where vessels of her type customarily wait; and
6.3.3 free practique has been granted or is granted within six (6) hours of the Master tendering NOR. If free practique is not granted within six (6) hours of the Master tendering NOR, through no fault of Owners, Agents, or those on board the Vessel, the Master shall issue a protest in writing ("NOP") to the port authority and the facility at the port ("Terminal") failing which lay time or, if the Vessel is on demurrage, demurrage shall only commence when free practique has been granted;
7. Laytime/Demurrage
7.1 Charterers shall be allowed the number of hours stated in Section 1 Part 1 together with any period of additional laytime arising under Clause 7.3.1, as laytime for loading and discharging and for any other purposes of Charterers in accordance with the provisions of this Charter.
7.4 Charterers shall pay demurrage at the rate stated in Section J or PART 1 per running day, and pro rate for part of a running day, for all time that loading and discharging and other time counting as laytime exceeds laytime under this Clause 7. If, however, demurrage is incurred by reason of the causes specified in Clause 17, the rate of demurrage shall be reduced to one-half of the rate stated in section J of PART 1 per running day, or pro rata for part of a running day, for demurrage so incurred.
19. PART A. LOADING AND DISCHARGE OF CARGO
19.2 The cargo shall be pumped into the Vessel at the expense and risk of Charterers and pumped out of the Vessel at the expense and risk of Owners, in each case only as far as the Vessel's manifold….
19.3 Owners undertake that:-
19.3.1 the Vessel shall load cargo at the maximum safe rate and in any event shall load a full cargo within a maximum period of twenty-four (24) hours, or pro-rate in the case of a part cargo, provided always that the cargo is capable of being supplied within such time; and
19.3.2 the Vessel shall discharge cargo at the maximum safe rate and in any event shall, in the case of cargoes of one or more segregated grades/parcels discharged concurrently or consecutively, discharge a full cargo within twenty-four (24 hours, or pro-rata in the case of a part cargo, or shall maintain a minimum discharge pressure of seven (7) bar at the Vessel's manifold throughout the bulk discharge provided always that the cargo is capable of being received within such time or at such pressure. If restrictions are imposed by the Terminal during discharge, or if physical attributes or the Terminal restrict the discharge rate or pressure, owners shall only be relieved of the aforesaid obligation for the period and to the extent such restrictions or attributes impede the discharge rate or pressure. The Terminal shall have the right to gauge discharge pressure. The Terminal shall have the right to gauge discharge pressure at the Vessel's manifold.
19.4 Any additional time used as a result of the inability of the Vessel to discharge the full cargo within twenty-four (24) hours, or pro rata in the case of a part cargo, or to maintain a minimum discharge or failure by the Vessel to meet any lesser performance required pursuant to a restriction imposed by the Terminal, shall be for Owners' account and shall not count as laytime or, if the Vessel is on demurrage, as demurrage.
19.6 If the full cargo cannot be delivered to the Vessel at the rate requested by the Master or within the time allowed in Clause 19.3.1 or if the Terminal is unable to receive the full cargo within twenty-four (24) hours or at a discharge pressure of seven (7) bar measured at the Vessel's manifold, the Master shall present a Note of Protest ("NOP") to a Terminal representative detailing any Terminal restrictions and/or deficiencies as soon as they are imposed and/or become apparent and shall use all reasonable endeavours to have the NOP signed by the Terminal representative. If the Master is unable to obtain a signature from the Terminal representative he shall present a further NOP recording the failure of the Terminal representative to sign the original NOP. In the case of restrictions imposed by the Terminal or arising from physical attributes of the Terminal, the Master shall ensure that such restrictions are clearly recorded in the Vessel's Pumping Log.
19.7 No claim by Owners in respect of additional time used in the cargo operations carried out under this Clause 19 shall be considered by Charterers unless it is accompanied by the following supporting documentation:-
19.7.1 the Vessel's Pumping Log signed by a senior officer of the Vessel and a Terminal representative showing at hourly intervals the pressure maintained at the Vessel's manifold throughout the cargo operations; and
19.7.2 copies of all NOPs issued, or received, by the Master in connection with the cargo operations; and
19.7.3 copies of all other documentation maintained by those on board the Vessel or by the Terminal in connection with the cargo operations
If vessel ordered to evacuate terminal or load/discharge place due to vessel's inability to load/discharge cargo in accordance with load/pumping warranty as above, then all related time, expenses and or damages incurred by charterers shall be on owners account. Laytime shall not count till vessel again all fast at berth/terminal.
…..
20. Claims Time Bar
20.1 Charterers shall be discharged and released from all liability in respect of any claim for demurrage, deviation or detention which Owners may have under this Charter unless a claim in writing has been presented to Charterers, together with all supporting documentation substantiating each and every constituent part of the claim, within ninety (90) days of the completion of discharge of the cargo carried hereunder."
The Questions of Law
As to Clause 19.7:
Question 1: "Does Clause 19.7.3 require owners to provide with their demurrage claim copies of all documents which the owners would be required to disclose in an arbitration reference to determine whether their claim that time counts during loading or discharging operations. If so, does Clause 19.7.3 thereby impose on the owners a contractual obligation to disclose all relevant documents in its possession and control when the claim is first made rather than waiting for disclosure to take place in the normal course of an arbitration reference?"
Question 2: "On a proper construction of Clause 19.7.2 are the charterers first required to satisfy an evidential burden that other notices of protest were issued but not provided by the owners with the demurrage claim in order to place the legal burden on the owners to prove a negative?"
Question 3: "Does Clause 19.7.3 require owners to provide to the charterers copies of documents which are in the owners' possession at the time the demurrage claim is made but the documents were neither created nor maintained on board the vessel?"
Question 4: "On a proper construction of Clause 19.7.3 are 'one-off' documents, which are generated by the vessel in connection with the cargo operations, within the scope of "documentation maintained by those on board the Vessel… in connection with the cargo operations…"?
As to Clause 20.1:
Question 5: "On a proper construction of Clause 20.1, does "all supporting documentation substantiating each and every constituent part of the claim" for a claim for demurrage which is not "additional time" for cargo operations within the meaning of Clause 19 of the BPVoy4 form charterparty require owners to provide all relevant supporting documentation, or only 'essential' supporting documentation?"
The Award
"20. "ADVENTURE" was undoubtedly delayed at Sitra and at Port Sudan beyond the period of allowable laytime of 3½ days. Kassiopi's Laytime/Demurrage calculation shows that the total time used at both ports was 25 days 5 hours 36 minutes. Allowing for the concession in Kassiopi's Reply Submissions that time did not start to count at Sitra until 16:00 hours on 17th June 2011, their claim that demurrage ran for 21 days 17 hours and 36 minutes is reduced by 3 hours 48 minutes to a claim that it ran for 21 days 13 hours and 48 minutes.
21. This claim assumes that the whole period of 21 days 13 hours and 48 minutes counts for laytime or, if "ADVENTURE" was on demurrage, for demurrage. The validity of that assumption depends in part on whether:-
(a) Any delay resulted from a failure by Kassiopi to provide any personnel, equipment and facilities which they have been requested to provide in accordance with their obligation under Clause 19.2.
(b) Any delay resulted from breach by Kassiopi of the obligation in Clause 19.3.1 to load cargo on "ADVENTURE" at Sitra at the maximum safe rate and within a maximum period of 24 hours, or pro rata in the case of a part cargo.
(c) Any delay resulted from a failure by "ADVENTURE" at Port Sudan:-
(i) to discharge cargo at the maximum safe rate, or in the case of cargoes of one or more segregated grades/parcels within 24 hours; or
(ii) to maintain a minimum discharge pressure of 7 bar at "ADVENTURE's" manifold throughout the bulk discharge unless the terminal was not capable of receiving cargo within that time or at such pressure;
in accordance with Clause 19.3.2.
22. If these assumptions are not supported by evidence, FAL are not liable for any delays resulting from a breach of these provisions by Kassiopi either because a charterer is not liable for delays caused by a breach of the charterparty by the owner or because the clause 19.2 and 19.4 expressly provides that those periods of delay caused by a breach of clause 19.2 or 19.3.2 should not count as laytime or, if the vessel is on demurrage, as demurrage…."
(a) "An invoice for US $364,847.78 dated 5th August 2011;
(b) A laytime/demurrage calculation for Sitra and Port Sudan;
(c) A Notice of Readiness for Sitra;
(d) A statement of facts for Sitra;
(e) Four Letters of Protest for Sitra;
(f) A Notice of Readiness for Port Sudan;
(g) A pumping record for Port Sudan;
(h) A statement of facts for Port Sudan
(i) Four Letters of Protest for Port Sudan;
(j) An Empty Tank Certificate for Port Sudan."
The authorities
"The commercial intention underlying this clause seems to me plainly to have been to ensure that claims were made by the owners within a short period of final discharge so that the claims could be investigated and if possible resolved while the facts were still fresh … This object could only be achieved if the charterers were put in possession of the factual material which they required in order to satisfy themselves whether the claims were well-founded or not."
"60. ... For my part I am not sure that it is helpful to introduce into the approach to these provisions a notion of strict compliance. Where in a commercial contract one finds a provision to the effect that one party is only to be liable to the other in respect of claims of which he has been given notice within a certain period, it is fair to assume that the parties wish their relationship to be informed rather by certainty than by strictness…
61. Thus the touchstone of the approach ought in my view to be a requirement of clarity sufficient to achieve certainty rather than a requirement of strict compliance which, if applied inflexibly, can lead to uncommercial results.
62. The basic requirement of the clause is that the charterers shall have received both the claim and the supporting documentation within the 90-day period. I accept that the charterers must be in a position to know that the one relates to the other… I would further accept that, consistently with the need for certainty, it must objectively speaking be apparent that the documentation is that which supports the claim, but I do not consider that in approaching that issue one should adopt a pedantic or strict approach which focuses on the form of the presentation rather than the substance."
"What is important, as Bingham J observed, is that the Charterers are put in possession of the factual material which they require in order to satisfy themselves whether a claim is well-founded or not."
"The Charterers received with the invoice of 2 April 2008 documents which objectively they would or could have appreciated substantiated each and every part of the claim. They were thereby put in possession of the factual material which they required in order to satisfy themselves that the claim was well-founded. They were able to satisfy themselves as to the extent of their liability."
Question 1: "Does Clause 19.7.3 require owners to provide with their demurrage claim copies of all documents which the owners would be required to disclose in an arbitration reference to determine whether their claim that time counts during loading or discharging operations. If so, does Clause 19.7.3 thereby impose on the owners a contractual obligation to disclose all relevant documents in its possession and control when the claim is first made rather than waiting for disclosure to take place in the normal course of an arbitration reference?"
"33. ….What is encompassed by the third category [Clause 19.7.3] is more debatable. We suspect that the definition of these documents is deliberately vague because different vessels and different terminal will not all keep the same type of record and that it was not possible for the draftsman to specify precisely what classes of documents would exist in any particular case which are relevant to an owner's claim for demurrage. However, the way the draftsman chose to define this category of documents presents two difficulties.
34. The first difficulty is the reference to documents "maintained… by the terminal". It seems to us that the parties cannot have intended this category of documents to accompany a claim for demurrage unless such documents were either in the possession or control of Kassiopi. Plainly documents maintained by the terminal which are not in Kassiopi's possession or control are not within their power to attach to a claim for demurrage. We do not think the parties to the Charterparty can have intended to require an owner to do the impossible. We therefore conclude that only such documents as are in Kassiopi's possession or control fall within the class of document referred to in Clause 19.7.3.
35. The second difficulty is what is meant by "cargo operations". We do not think that the parties can have intended this phrase to include any document that refers to the cargo as FAL originally appeared to argue. We think that the parties must have intended to include only such documents as are relevant to a claim for laytime and demurrage arising during the loading and discharging of cargo and which bear on the issue of whether or not time counts under clause 19.
36. A third difficulty arises not from the clause itself, but from the fact that Kassiopi have not given full disclosure of all relevant documents in their possession in this arbitration. Accordingly, we do not know for certain what documents fall within the third category of documents. However, we consider that the purpose of clause 19.7.3 is to require that all the documents (other than those referred to in clauses 19.7.1 and 19.7.2) which Kassiopi would be required to disclose in an arbitration to determine whether their claim that time counts during loading or discharging operations should accompany the claim and so impose on Kassiopi a contractual obligation to disclose all relevant documents in its possession and control when the claim is first made rather than waiting for disclosure to take place in the normal course of an arbitration. Such documents would include documents which not only supports Kassiopi's claim that time counts during loading or discharging operations, but also those which adversely effects that claim."
"38. ….It is plain from the letters of protest that, as we would expect, a port log and time sheets were kept on board "ADVENTURE". These plainly contained relevant entries as the Letters of Protest refer to them. At least these documents should have been attached to the e-mail dated 5th August 2011. In his witness statement, Captain Karalexis exhibits to his statement the e-mail dated 22nd July 2012 "free Practique by VHF O.K granted". It seems to us that this is another document which Clause 19.7.3 requires to have been attached to the e-mail dated 5th August 2011 and which was not attached.
39. In these circumstances, we conclude that Kassiopi have not complied with the requirement in clause 19.7 that the categories of documents which it provides should accompany a claim for demurrage, did in fact do so…."
"40. The consequences of the failure to prove that they attached to that e-mail all the documents which clause 19.7 provides should have been attached, are the consequence which by clause 19.7 the parties have agreed should follow from such a failure, namely that "no claim by Owners in respect of additional time used in the cargo operations carried out under … Clause 19 shall be considered by the Charterers" or, we infer, by us. This does not conclude matters because there were other delays at Sitra and Port Sudan, which did not arise in the course of cargo operations. Therefore they are not covered by clause 19.7….. "
(1) Such an approach is contrary to the aim of promoting clarity and certainty because owners would be left wondering what documents they do in fact have to 'disclose' with the demurrage claim. In particular:(i) The scope of the disclosable documentation in either an arbitral reference or court proceedings will be determined by the parties' cases as set out in the pleadings. The pleadings identify and define the issues in dispute between the parties which in turn will determine which documents are disclosable.(ii) As such it is not possible for owners to undertake disclosure before the claim has even begun.(2) From a practical perspective the Tribunal's construction of the clause would put a very heavy burden on owners.
(i) It would require them not just to provide copies of the type of documents that are routinely attached to demurrage claims (NORs, SOFs, NOPs, Pumping Logs) but would require them to undertake an enquiry with the crew on each occasion to ensure that all documentation was provided.(ii) On the Tribunal's interpretation this would encompass documents such as rough copy documents, personal notebooks of the crew, and all emails sent or received by the vessel insofar as any of the documents related to the loading or discharging operations.
Question 4: "On a proper construction of Clause 19.7.3 are 'one-off' documents, which are generated by the vessel in connection with the cargo operations, within the scope of "documentation maintained by those on board the Vessel… in connection with the cargo operations…"?
(1) The context of the Clause is the provision of documents relating to a claim by Owners for additional time in loading or discharging the cargo. Its focus is the loading and discharging operations and why that has taken longer than the time set out in the Clause.(2) The specific documents referred to in Clauses 19.7.1 and 19.7.2 both specifically relate to the performance of loading and discharging operations.
(3) Construed in context, Clause 19.7.3 is likely to be sweep up provision to catch documentary records similar to those covered under Clauses 19.7.1 and 19.7.2. As the Tribunal observed:
"….different vessels and different terminal will not all keep the same type of record and that it was not possible for the draftsman to specify precisely what classes of documents would exist in any particular case which are relevant to an owner's claim for demurrage."
Question 5: "On a proper construction of Clause 20.1, does "all supporting documentation substantiating each and every constituent part of the claim" for a claim for demurrage which is not "additional time" for cargo operations within the meaning of Clause 19 of the BPVoy4 form charterparty require owners to provide all relevant supporting documentation, or only 'essential' supporting documentation?"
"41. Clause 19.7 requires that there should be a claim in writing as there was in the e-mail dated 5th August 2011. It also requires that "all supporting documentation substantiating each and every constituent part of the claim" be presented to FAL within 90 days of completion of discharge at Port Sudan, in other words by 27th October 2011. The Court of Appeal held in The "Abqaiq" [2012] 1 Lloyd's Rep 18 that it was not necessary for the supporting documentation to be presented with the claim itself, but it had to be presented within the 90 days. This decision does not assist Kassiopi because the only supporting documentation which was presented in time was that which was attached to the e-mail dated 5th August 2011, and the only supporting document which was subsequently presented was Captain Karalexis's witness statement and its exhibits which was not presented to FAL until Kassiopi's Rejoinder Submissions were served on 24th February 2014.
42. It follows from what we have said above that although some of the supporting documentation was presented within the 90 day period, not all of it was. In particular, "ADVENTURE's" port log and time sheets were not presented at all and the e-mail from the master dated 22nd July 2011 on which Captain Karalexis had written in manuscript the information that free practique had been granted at Sitra was not presented in time. The consequence is the one which the parties agreed in clause 20. I should follow, namely that FAL are discharged and released from all liability in respect of Kassiopi's claim for demurrage; see The "Eagle Valencia" [2010] 2 Lloyds Rep 257 at 264 where the Court of Appeal held that where an invalid notice of readiness was presented in time and a valid notice of readiness was presented out of time, the claim for demurrage was extinguished in accordance with the terms of the charterparty in that case."
"(1) a summary demurrage report, plus detailed demurrage reports for Freeport and Singapore; (2) notice of readiness, port log, statement of facts and Master's letters of protest for Freeport; and (3) notice of readiness, statement of facts, discharging log, timesheet, Master's letter of protest and pumping log for Singapore."
"37 I confess that I find the proposition that a claim put in on time but in respect of part of which the accompanying documents are non-contractual gives rise to a bar to the entire claim is a commercially surprising construction. I am not persuaded that the clause requires the Owners to submit only one composite claim (even though they would usually do so and in fact did so). In my judgment it was open to the Owners to present a number of separate claims if so advised and in those circumstances the lack of documentation for one or more parts of the claim would not constitute a bar to the balance.
38 In my judgment it cannot have been the intention of the parties that the choice to present a composite claim would give rise to a different outcome. Even if a composite claim was required, I am not persuaded that on its proper construction the effect of clause 20 was such that the failure to provide all 'supporting documentation' (whether needed by reason of the requirements of clause 19 or otherwise) for one constituent part of the claim discharged liability for the entire demurrage claim."
"If the required documentation relating to one part of the claim is incomplete the owner will … not be barred from recovery of another part of the claim, where the two parts are unrelated".
Conclusion