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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Campbell v Conoco (UK) Ltd & Ors [2002] EWCA Civ 704 (2 May 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/704.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 704, [2003] 1 All ER (Comm) 35 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(Mr Justice Garland)
Strand London WC2 Thursday 2nd May, 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
____________________
SHAUN CAMPBELL | ||
Claimant | ||
- v - | ||
CONOCO (UK) LIMITED | ||
First Defendant/1st Part 20 Claimant | ||
(1st Part 20 Claim) | ||
BRITANNIA OPERATOR LIMITED | ||
Second Defendant/2nd Part 20 Claimant | ||
(1st Part 20 Claim) | ||
and | ||
AMEC PROCESS AND ENERGY LIMITED | ||
Part 20 Defendant (to 1st Part 20 Claim) | ||
and Part 20 Claimant (2nd Part 20 Claim) | ||
/Respondent | ||
and | ||
SALAMIS SGB LIMITED | ||
Part 20 Defendant (2nd Part 20 Claim) | ||
/Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR C du CANN (Instructed by Badhams, Croydon CR0 7AP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"The sub-contract was expressly accepted on a back to back basis with the main contract."
"The Sub-Contractor accepts The Contract on a back to back basis with Contract BRT-YH1 between BOL and Contractor.
For the avoidance of doubt, where reference is made, within the Contract, to Operator these should be read as Contractor, and, where reference is made to Contractor, these should be read as Sub-Contractor."
"(i) The Operator hereby agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Contractor against all liabilities for and all claims arising in respect of any injury, death, sickness or ill health caused to or suffered by the Operator's employees as a result of or arising out of the performance or non-performance by the Contractor of the Contract regardless of the cause or reason therefor and regardless of the negligence or breach of statutory duty of the Contractor and against all costs, charges, expenses, damages and proceedings incurred in connection with such claims or liabilities howsoever arising.
(ii) The Contractor hereby agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Operator against all liability for, and all claims arising in respect of any injury, death, sickness or ill health caused to or suffered by the Contractor and any Personnel as a result of or arising out of or in connection with the performance or non-performance of the Contract regardless of the cause or reason therefor and regardless of the negligence or breach of statutory duty of the Operator and against all costs, charges, expenses, damages and proceedings incurred in connection with such claims or liabilities howsoever arising."
"`Personnel' means all natural persons including employees, servants or agents engaged by or through the Contractor and its Sub-Contractors and utilised in and about the performance of the Contract;"
"I am in no doubt that the very wide wording of Clause 26(a)(ii) is apt to include the circumstances of the Claimant's accident. I cannot read into it a requirement for some form of nexus to the performance of the subcontract. With the qualifications I have expressed in paragraph 14, I have found the decisions in EE Caledonia helpful. While fully accepting Mr Palmer's submission that an indemnity which includes the indemnified's own negligence requires very careful scrutiny, nevertheless if the words are clear, as they are, `regardless of the negligence or breach of statutory duty of [Amec]', there is no justification for imposing a strained or artificially restrictive interpretation on `as a result of or arising out of or in connection with' which, in my judgement, would have been sufficient to support the indemnity even without the words `regardless of the cause or reason therefor'."
"The plaintiffs argue that the words `resulting from or in any way connected with the performance of this order' are sufficiently wide to cover a liability which has arisen because Mr Quinn, the person who was performing the order, was on the platform, at the time he met his death, solely because of the need to perform the order; he was on the platform pursuant to the obligation to perform the order which necessitated his spending some 10 days on the platform. On the ordinary use of language, it would be said that the fact that he met his death was `connected with the performance of the order.'
The contrary argument is that the word `performance' must be treated as relevant to the doing of the actual `work' itself so that, in the present case, it would only be if his death had arisen in some way in connection with the actual work that the incident would have come within the terms of article 10(b). The defendants referred me to several cases where contracts have been construed so as to have that effect, for example, the South Wales Switchgear case [1978] 1 WLR 165, 178, where Lord Keith said: `In my opinion the words "execution of this order" mean "the doing by the suppliers of the contractual work."' Each contract depends upon its own wording and context. The defendants' argument is, in my judgment, unnecessarily restrictive in the context of the present contract and fails to give effect to the choice of the word `order' by the parties and the full breadth of the phrase `in any way connected with.' In part (a) there are references to `the work'; in parts (b) and (c) a different phrase has been used (`the performance of the order') which has a wider ambit. Nor is any restrictive interpretation required by the fact that the same phrase is used in part (c). ... Giving the phrase which the parties have used in article 10(b) its natural meaning does not give rise to any absurdity or expose the contractor (or the company) to an unreasonable liability."
"But I am also persuaded that Mr Quinn's death `resulted from' the fact that he was on the platform to perform the order, i.e. the agreement. I agree with the judge's further observations on this point."
"I have not found Mr Palmer's second argument as easy to resolve. Clearly there is a fundamental difference between a `claim arising in respect of any injury' and a claim based on a contractual indemnity given by Amec to Conoco but of which Salamis had notice by virtue of the `back to back' recital. I am, however, persuaded that the second line of the indemnity should be read disjunctively as `all liability for any injury' in contrast to `all claims arising in respect of any injury' and that the former is apt to include Amec's claim based on their indemnity to Conoco for the latter's liability to the Claimant for his injuries. The use of the words `all' and `any', in my judgment, widen the scope of the phrase sufficiently."