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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Limit (No 3) Ltd & Ors v PDV Insurance Company [2005] EWCA Civ 383 (11 April 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/383.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 383 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
2002 Folio No. 1328/1329
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
____________________
LIMIT (NO 3) LIMITED & OTHERS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PDV INSURANCE COMPANY |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss Siobαn Healy (instructed by Hill Taylor Dickinson) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Auld :
Introduction
i) PDVSA is in breach of the notification provision of the original policy; and/or
ii) the loss is excluded under the pollution exclusions of the original policy and the reinsurance and retrocession policies; and/or
iii) in any event, PDVIC is not obliged to make good losses which PDVSA is not obliged to pay under the terms of contracts with landowners or other third parties the rights of such parties having been waived; and/or
iv) in any event, the date for taking the exchange rate between Venezuelan Bolivars and US Dollars is the date of any actual payment by Mercantil to PDVSA.
i) whether the dispute in the case of each incident is covered by the Dispute Clause in the retrocession slip policy so as to require Limit's claim for declaratory relief to be tried in the English courts; and, if not
ii) whether the English or the Venezuelan courts are the forum conveniens.
Whether the risk is covered by the Dispute Clause in the retrocession slip so as to require the proceedings to be tried by in the English courts
"Any dispute concerning the interpretation of the terms, conditions, limitations and/or exclusions contained herein, is understood and agreed by both the Reinsured and Reinsurers to be subject to English Law. Each party agrees to submit to the jurisdiction of any Court of competent jurisdiction within England and to comply with all requirements necessary to give such Court jurisdiction.
All matters arising hereunder shall be determined in accordance with the law and practice of such Court."
The 1997 and 1999 slips
"FORM: Wording as expiring. Amendments, if any, to be agreed slip leader only.
ORIGINAL INSURED: PETROLEOS DE VENEZUELA and/or its direct and indirect subsidiaries and/or its direct and indirect affiliates as original.
SITUATION: Worldwide excluding USA/Canadian domiciled companies other than sales offices. ..
CONDITIONS:
- Full Reinsurance Clause (NMA 416) ex premium. Including all endorsements and addenda as expiring.
- Seepage and Pollution Clause NMA 1683 or as expiring
- USA CANADIAN JURISDICTION SUBJECT TO:
- Excluding punitive and exemplary damages.
- costs inclusive.
- Excluding pollution absolutely.
- Disputes clause (English Law)
all as expiring.
In respect of the Reactivation of Marginal Fields Project and construction activities only, the exclusion of US/Canadian domiciled companies is deleted, however, in respect of all Co-Insureds domiciled in the USA/Canada, Jurisdiction hereunder is Worldwide excluding USA/Canada all as expiring.
Claims Co-operation Clause as expiring as attached."
It should be noted that the summary in the "USA CANADIAN JURISDICTION " section of the slip reflects but does not entirely replicate similar provisions in the reinsurance contract between Mercantil and PDVIC.
"(i) COVERAGE
The indemnity provided by this Policy in respect of any judgment, award or settlement within countries which operated under the laws of the United States of America and/or Canada (or to any order made anywhere in the world to enforce such judgment, award or settlement either in whole or in part) is subject to the following additional conditions and exclusions:
(b) SPECIAL EXCLUSIONS
i) No liability shall attach to Insurers in respect of any fines, penalties, punitive or exemplary damages,
ii) This policy does not cover any claims whatsoever arising directly or indirectly from seepage, pollution and contamination.
(ii) DEFENCE COSTS:
All Defence Costs in respect of claims under this Memorandum shall be included in the limit of liability hereunder
(iii) DISPUTES CLAUSE
Any dispute concerning the interpretation of the terms, conditions and limitations applying to this Memorandum shall be subject to English Law. The Insured and Insurers agree to submit to the jurisdiction of any court of competent jurisdiction within England and to comply with all requirements to give such court jurisdiction. All matters arising hereunder shall be determined in accordance with the law and practice of such court. "
I have emphasised the words in the above formulation of the Disputes Clause, "the terms, conditions and limitations applying to this Memorandum" so as to indicate the slight difference in wording from the corresponding passage in the Disputes Clause attached to the 1996 and 1997 slips, namely "the terms, conditions, limitations and/or exclusions contained herein". As will appear, Mr Richard Millett QC, for Limit, relied in support of a broad construction of the slip attachments on the presence in their versions of the Dispute Clause of the word "exclusions", not mentioned in the Memorandum version, and the substitution of the word "herein" in the slip attachment versions for the words in the Memorandum version "applying to this Memorandum".
The Judgment
"11. If one asks oneself why the parties should have attached the disputes clause to the slip, one obvious answer is that it was to enable anyone reading the slip to identify the disputes clause referred to in the condition relating to the United States and Canada.
12. In my view, the condition relating to the claims arising in the United States and Canada is intended to capture, albeit in more abbreviated terms, the protection provided under the original policy by Memorandum 1. The exclusion of punitive and exemplary damages, the exclusion of pollution liability absolutely and the inclusion of costs mirror to a remarkable extent the substantive terms of that Memorandum and suggest strongly that is what was intended. It is quite natural in that context to incorporate the disputes clause as well, but in order to do that it would either have to be set out in full in the body of the slip or identified in some other way. A clause of that kind is not usually set out in the slip, so it would not be surprising to find it as an attachment. However, the wording of the clause in Memorandum 1 is not wholly apt for incorporation directly into the reinsurance contract because it refers in terms to the Memorandum. Sometimes the wholesale incorporation of clauses lifted from another contract gives rise to linguistic anomalies, but if the draftsman of the slip is alive to such difficulties, he may well adapt the clause in a way which he thinks makes it more suitable for inclusion the particular contract before him. In my view that is what has happened in the present case and the introduction of the reference to "exclusions" is in my view quite understandable in the light of the wording of the condition relating to United States and Canadian Jurisdiction which refers in terms to exclusions
"13. The clause remains awkward in some respects, however, in particular in the use of the word 'herein' That awkwardness disappears to some extent, however, if one reads the clause as if it were incorporated in the condition itself, or as part of a group of terms covering the same subject matter in a treaty wording. In my view the clause was attached to the slip simply to identify it as the disputes clause referred to in that condition and was not intended to apply to the contract as a whole."
" was simply to ensure that any additions and alteration to the expiring contract introduced during the policy year by way of endorsement or addendum were incorporated into the new terms. In other words, the condition was designed to ensure that the slip reproduced the expiring terms, subject to whatever modifications were introduced by the other conditions."
The "fresh" evidence.
Submissions on the basis of the evidence before the Judge
Conclusion
Forum conveniens
" Almost all the issues that are likely to arise in this litigation can more appropriately be decided in Venezuela where the relevant documents and witnesses are readily available than in this country and even those issues of law and construction which fall to be decided under English law can be determined satisfactorily there. "
I turn now to each of the issues and the Judge's treatment of them leading him to that conclusion. In doing so, I have in mind the general propositions behind the three submissions of Miss Healy that I have summarised in paragraph 39 above and which I accept - in particular, the application of the Spiliada principle that it is for Limit to show that England is clearly the more suitable forum for trial in the interests of the parties and for the ends of justice.
Delay in notification of loss
"Sudden, unforeseen and accidental incident"/ "Sudden, unintended and unexpected happening"
Liability to indemnify landowners
"They are all questions, however, that would be more suitably decided in Venezuela if they were to arise."
Currency conversion
Limitation
" I doubt whether PDVSA or Mercantil would simply let the matter go without a fight. I think it likely, therefore, that there will be argument about the application of the law on limitation to the facts of this case, and if there is, I think that Venezuela is clearly the more appropriate place in which to decide the question, both because the relevant evidence is there and because the courts there are better equipped to determine the issues of law to which they are likely to give rise."
The wider implications of these proceedings
" many of the issues raised in these proceedings relate directly to other contracts of insurance and reinsurance, linking [Limit] to PDVSA. It is likely, therefore, that in order to protect its own position PDVIC will wish to raise the same points against Mercantil and it is possible that Mercantil might wish to raise some or all the same points against PDVSA. In that case it would clearly be desirable for the issues all to be determined in one set of proceedings. That would not be impossible if the actions were to continue in this country since the Civil Procedure Rules permit the service abroad of proceedings by a defendant against other parties where his claim against them turns on similar or related issues, but the fact that all but one of the parties are located in Venezuela and that the underlying contracts are probably all governed by Venezuelan law is a good indication of where the centre of gravity of the litigation as a whole lies."
The quality of the administration of justice in Venezuela
"It is well-known that the political situation in Venezuela has been in turmoil in recent months and that as a result there has been some disruption of public services, but despite that I do not think that the evidence on which [Limit] [relies] provides sufficient grounds for thinking that it would not be possible for a dispute of this kind to be resolved in Venezuela fairly and within a reasonable period of time. it is by no means clear that the comments made in [the 2003] report were directed to the Supreme Court or to the kind of litigation involved in this case. In The Abidin Daver [1984] AC 398, at pages 410-411 Lord Diplock pointed out that it is not appropriate for the court to embark upon a comparison of the quality of justice obtainable in a foreign jurisdiction with that obtainable in this country; if a claimant wishes to contend that he will not obtain justice in another jurisdiction he must say so candidly and support his argument with cogent evidence. In the present case neither of those requirements is satisfied and accordingly I do not consider this to be a proper factor to take into account when considering the exercise of my discretion. "
General conclusion
Lord Justice Tuckey:
Lord Justice Clarke: