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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Petroleo Brasileiro SA v ENE Kos 1 Ltd [2012] UKSC 17 (2 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2012/17.html Cite as: [2012] 2 WLR 976, [2012] UKSC 17, [2012] 4 All ER 1, [2012] 2 AC 164, [2012] WLR(D) 132, [2012] 2 Lloyd's Rep 292, [2013] 1 CLC 1, 149 Con LR 76, [2013] 1 All ER (Comm) 32 |
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Easter Term
[2012] UKSC 17
On appeal from: [2010] EWCA Civ 772
JUDGMENT
Petroleo Brasileiro S.A. (Respondent) v E.N.E. Kos 1 Limited (Appellant)
before
Lord Phillips, President
Lord Walker
Lord Mance
Lord Clarke
Lord Sumption
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
2 May 2012
Heard on 12 January 2012
Appellant Timothy Brenton QC (Instructed by Ince & Co LLP) |
Respondent Andrew Baker QC Henry Byam-Cook (Instructed by Thomas Cooper Solicitors) |
LORD SUMPTION (WITH WHOM LORD WALKER AGREES)
New contract after withdrawal
Implications of the owners' decision to withdraw
Clause 13
"The master (although appointed by owners) shall be under the orders and direction of charterers as regards employment of the vessel, agency or other arrangements. Bill[s] of lading are to be signed as charterers or their agents may direct, without prejudice to this charter... charterers hereby indemnify owners against all consequences or liabilities that may arise from the master, charterers or their agents signing bills of lading or other documents, or from the master otherwise complying with charterers' or their agents' orders..."
"not a natural consequence of ordering [the cargo] to be loaded that it would have to be discharged at the self-same port. The true cause of the necessity for the discharge of the cargo was the fact that, in the light of the withdrawal, the owners required the charterers to discharge the cargo."
In effect, therefore, both courts below found that the withdrawal of the vessel was an independent cause of the loss, breaking the chain of causation between the order to load the cargo and the detention of the vessel after withdrawal.
(1) In my judgment the whole of the 2.64 days during which the vessel was detained resulted from the cargo being on board on the charterers' orders at the time of the withdrawal. The time required to remove it was unnecessarily prolonged by the charterers' refusal to recognise the owners' right to withdraw the vessel or to make immediate arrangements for the removal of their cargo from a ship that was no longer at their disposal contractually, but that does not alter the character or cause of the delay.
(2) It is not suggested that there is any difference, in the circumstances of this case, between (i) the measure of the owners' loss in having to await discharge and then discharge in their own time, and (ii) reasonable remuneration for involuntarily making their ship available during that period. On the face of it, the opportunity cost to the owners of the detention of their ship is the market rate of hire at the time. In the absence of any subsisting contractual obligation to make her available at any other rate, the owners' loss is the market rate of hire for 2.64 days.
(3) Although the Court of Appeal distinguished between the owners' right to the value of bunkers consumed (in actually discharging the cargo) and the rest of the owners' claim, it seems to me that the two heads of loss must stand or fall together. The owners are therefore entitled to the value of bunkers consumed during the whole period of detention.
Bailment
"The general principle is, beyond all question, that work and labour done or money expended by one man to preserve or benefit the property of another do not according to English law create any lien upon the property saved or benefited, nor, even if standing alone, create any obligation to repay the expenditure. Liabilities are not to be forced upon people behind their backs any more than you can confer a benefit upon a man against his will."
"...not merely is a power given, but a duty is cast on the master in many cases of accident and emergency to act for the safety of the cargo, in such manner as may be best under the circumstances in which it may be placed; and that, as a correlative right, he is entitled to charge its owner with the expenses properly incurred in so doing... In a case like the present, where the goods could neither be landed nor remain where they were, it seems to be a legitimate extension of the implied agency of the master to hold that, in the absence of all advices, he had authority to carry or send them on to such other place as in his judgment, prudently exercised, appeared to be most convenient for their owner; and if so, it will follow from established principles that the expenses properly incurred may be charged to him... The authority of the master being founded on necessity would not have arisen if he could have obtained instructions from the defendant or his assignees. But under the circumstances this was not possible."
" the bailment which up to the conclusion of the salvage services had been a bailment for valuable consideration became a gratuitous bailment; and so long as that relationship of bailor and bailee continued to subsist the salvors, under the ordinary principles of the law of bailment too well known and too well-established to call for any citation of authority, owed a duty of care to the cargo owner to take such measures to preserve the salved wheat from deterioration by exposure to the elements as a man of ordinary prudence would take for the preservation of his own property. For any breach of such duty the bailee is liable to his bailor in damages for any diminution in value of the goods consequent upon his failure to take such measures; and if he fulfils that duty he has, in my view, a correlative right to charge the owner of the goods with the expenses reasonably incurred in doing so."
He regarded this as being the principle applied in Cargo ex Argos and Swaffield in which the decisive facts, on his analysis, had been (i) that the bailee was left in possession of the goods after the termination of the contract under which the bailment had originally been made, and (ii) that in the absence of any contrary instructions from the cargo-owner, the warehousing of the goods was necessary for their preservation: see p 960G-H. Lord Diplock added, at p 961:
"It is, of course, true that in English law a mere stranger cannot compel an owner of goods to pay for a benefit bestowed upon him against his will; but this latter principle does not apply where there is a pre-existing legal relationship between the owner of the goods and the bestower of the benefit, such as that of bailor and bailee, which imposes upon the bestower of the benefit a legal duty of care in respect of the preservation of the goods that is owed by him to their owner."
Unjust enrichment
Conclusion
LORD PHILLIPS
LORD MANCE
"This conclusion clears the ground for consideration of a further submission on behalf of the owner. The loading, if not the proximate cause, was at any rate, it is argued, a cause of the explosion, and that is sufficient for the purpose of clause 9. Sir Robert Aske does not in this contention rely on the phrase 'all consequences'; in this I think he is right, having regard to the dictum of Willes J in Ionides v Universal Marine Insurance Co (1863) 14 CB (NS) 259, 289. He relies on the principle applicable in cases of tort, and he referred again to Burrows v March Gas and Coke Co LR 7 Ex 96, though Baron Pigott, in the court below (LR 5 Ex 67, 73) hardly supports the contention. He referred also to Minister of Pensions v Chennell [1947] KB 250, where Denning J discusses the whole matter. As against this, Sir William McNair argues that the term 'a cause' can properly be used only when there are two or more causes equal in proximity, as in Reischer v Borwick [1894] 2 QB 548. I need not consider this last contention, for I think it is clear that clause 9 is concerned with the proximate cause. It is a contract of indemnity, and I can see no reason for treating it differently from any other contract of insurance. The observations of Lord Shaw in The Ikaria [1918] AC 350, 368 and the dicta he there cites are also in point."
"namely, that the right to indemnity only arises if and in so far as the loss suffered by the shipowners can be proved to have been caused by compliance with the time charterers' instructions" (p 1107).
Donaldson J went on to note Mr Goff's further observation that causation is rarely a live issue in cases where an owner has on charterers' instructions signed bills of lading committing him to liabilities over and above his charterparty liabilities, but that causation is all important in other cases.
"A loss may well arise in the course of compliance with the time charterers' orders, but this fact does not, without more, establish that it was caused by and is in law a consequence of such compliance and, in the absence of proof of such causation, there is no right to indemnity". (p 1108)
LORD CLARKE
Construction of clause 13
"charterers hereby indemnify owners against all consequences that may arise from the master complying with charterers' orders ".
"From these five [the arbitrator] selects the act which caused the flame or spark and the explosive atmosphere as the direct or immediate or effective causes of the first explosion."
The first explosion is the only explosion which is relevant for present purposes. It would seem to follow from that conclusion that there were two effective causes and not one. It would also seem to follow that the arbitrator was choosing causes (a) and (d) as the two effective causes. However the arbitrator then held (as stated at p 232) that "the loading of the coal, while one of the causes of the damage to the ship (using the word 'causes' in its wide sense), was not the direct or immediate or effective cause of the loss or expenses claimed".
"So the matter comes down to this, that the arbitrator has selected one cause in preference to another as the proximate or direct cause. I cannot see that any question of law is involved in this selection".
In short, Devlin J held that that conclusion was a conclusion of fact and that the arbitrator had not misdirected himself in law.
"But for my part I do not consider that the court should strain to find a dominant cause if, as here, there are two causes both of which can be properly described as effective causes of the loss. Mr Le Quesne recognised that if there are two causes which are approximately equal in effectiveness, then it is impossible to call one rather than the other the dominant cause. I should prefer to say that unless one cause is clearly more decisive than the other, it should be accepted that there are two causes of the loss and no attempt should be made to give one of them the quality of dominance."
Causation on the facts