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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> S.C. Compania Nationala De Transporturi Aeriene Romane Tarom S.A. v Jet2.Com Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 87 (06 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/87.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 87 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
HHJ Mackie QC (Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
____________________
S.C. Compania Nationala de Transporturi Aeriene Romane Tarom S.A. |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Jet2.com Limited |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Alan Steinfeld QC and Steven Thompson (instructed by Bird & Bird LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 9th December 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
The background
The contract
The relevant terms
"8. Article 1 deals with interpretation setting out a considerable number of defined terms the most relevant of which are;
""Aircraft" / "Aircraft Fleet" in essence, any Boeing 737 operated by Jet2, in respect of which Tarom might be asked to perform Work pursuant to an RFS.
"RFS" a Request for Service, defined by the example appended to the Agreement.
"Term" 3 years, but extendable under Article 16, which gave Jet2 a unilateral option to extend for a further 3 years on the same terms unless the parties agreed variations before the end of the first 3 years;
"Work" services requested by Jet2 under an RFS or otherwise carried out under the Agreement. In practice this was base maintenance work, known as or carried out during the course of C-Checks;
"Work Commencement Slots" called by the parties "slots" or "WCSs", but defined as dates set out in Appendix F and in respect of which an RFS is delivered.
"Working Day" included Saturday mornings and excluded any day which was a public holiday in Bucharest.
9 Article 2 deals with the scope of services. The Agreement is to apply "in relation to each such Aircraft as the Customer may from time to time at its election specify is an Aircraft to which this Agreement is to apply, in relation to the Work specified in an RFS relating to such Aircraft issued by the Customer to the Contractor. Any RFS issued by the Customer must be delivered to the Contractor not later than 60 days prior to the Work Commencement Date for that Aircraft specified in the RFS".
10 By Article 2.4 the Contractor holds open Work Commencement Slots exclusively for the use of the Customer. The Customer will however lose its rights in relation to a slot if it has not by a specified due date elected to issue an RFS for Work to be commenced on an Aircraft on the date of that Work Commencement Slot. Article 2.4 also requires the customer by no later than 1 June in each year to pay to the contractor US$10,000 for each of the Work Commencement Slots available to the Customer during the twelve months commencing on the next following 31 August for a Check other than a 6C-Check and US$20,000 for each of the Work Commencement Slots available to the Customer during twelve months commencing on the next following 31 August for a 6C-Check.
11 Article 3 deals with charges and payment requiring all sums due to be paid in US dollars and for 50% of the agreed fixed price for an RFS, less any deposits paid, to be paid on or prior to the delivery of the Aircraft for its checks.
12 Article 12 deals with "Term and Termination" and the relevant sub Articles read as follows:-
"12.1 This Agreement shall subsist for the Term and the terms and conditions of this Agreement shall apply to all Work carried out (or which should in accordance with this Agreement and/or any applicable RFS have been carried out) during the Term. This Agreement may be terminated as follows:
..
b) notwithstanding the above provisions, by notice from the Contractor to the Customer having immediate effect, when the Customer is in default in the punctual payment of any sum due to Contractor and, following receipt of written notice of default from the Contractor, fails to cure the default within twenty (20) business days after the receipt of such notice.
12.3 This Agreement may be terminated or cancelled at any time by mutual written consent of the Parties.
12.4 In the event of this Agreement being terminated by notice or otherwise, such termination shall be without prejudice to any rights and liabilities accrued prior to the termination.
12.6 Any termination by a Party by reason of the other Party's default or by reason of insolvency or similar circumstances affecting the other will be without prejudice to all the other rights and remedies of such Party by reason of the other's default."
13 Article 13 entitled "Miscellaneous" provides that the Agreement is subject to English law and the jurisdiction of the English courts. It also provides:
"13.9 Nothing in this Agreement is to be construed as imposing on the Customer any obligation to have any services performed by Contractor on any of its Aircraft Fleet or any part thereof, unless and until the Customer in its discretion issues an RFS in respect of services on the particular Aircraft therein specified. Notwithstanding the foregoing Customer agrees that it will not during the Term have scheduled maintenance of the nature described in this Agreement carried out by any other contractor unless either (i) Customer has reasonably determined that Contractor is likely to be unable to complete such scheduled maintenance by the due date required by Customer or (ii) in relation to any Aircraft on which Contractor shall have previously completed Work under this Agreement Contractor has failed to complete such Work by its Scheduled Completion Date (as the same may have been extended by Article 4.2)."
14 Appendix F contained a list of planned dates for particular WCSs for the 7 aircraft scheduled for service by Tarom in 2004/5. It is agreed that the dates slipped for the 4 later ones. For subsequent winter seasons starting on 1 September, the slots were such dates as Jet2 might specify in a notice by at least 9 months beforehand (i.e. by 1 December), as confirmed in a second notice by 3 months in advance (i.e. by 1 June). The second notice could add further dates".
How it worked
The History
"A note to confirm that currently we expect to require 2 concurrent, simultaneous Maintenance Slots at Tarom for the period October 07 to 30th April 2008".
In other words Jet2 reserved two lines for the whole of the winter.
2007
Negotiations
Planes
G-CELD
G-CELB
Slots for 2007/8
Negotiations with JAT Tehnika
The judgment of 15 March 2012
The critical assumption
"As Mr White saw it JAT had been "pencilled in" and, given the lack of reassurance from Tarom as late as August 2007, it was more likely than not that JAT would perform the work. I have no reason to doubt that assessment. If that reassurance had come in and/or Jet2 had been able to assume that Tarom would comply with its obligations under the Agreement I consider that Tarom would have got some, but since this was happening at a relatively late stage, not all of the work. Presumably some things were at an advanced stage and it might have been commercially unwise, having signed up JAT and paid deposits for Jet2 to give them no work for the season after all (apart from G-CELH). It seems from the schedules that for the 2007/2008 season four aircraft went to Leeds and six to JAT. The fact that the technical and operational staff (although, as I accept, not senior management) had largely written off Tarom suggests that in practice Jet2 were unenthusiastic about using Tarom. Mr Menzies had sought to focus staff on to JAT and away from Tarom. I conclude however that if Tarom had expressed its willingness to perform and shown that it was taking some steps to do so, at least some but not all these aircraft would have been placed with it over the 2007/2008 season. I will hear more argument about that before taking a final view."
[Emphasis added]
The judgment of 11 October 2012
Tarom's principal case
Analysis
"The court, in my view, has to conduct a factual inquiry as to how the contract would have been performed had it not been repudiated. Its performance is the only counter-factual assumption in the exercise. On the basis of that premise, the court has to look at the relevant economic and other surrounding circumstances to decide on the level of performance which the defendant would have adopted. The judge conducting the assessment must assume that the defendant would not have acted outside the terms of the contract and would have performed it in his own interests having regard to the relevant factors prevailing at the time. But the court is not required to make assumptions that the defaulting party would have acted uncommercially merely in order to spite the claimant. To that extent, the parties are to be assumed to have acted in good faith although with their own commercial interests very much in mind."
Tarom contends that these remarks were concerned with assessment not causation. I disagree. It does not seem to me that Patten LJ, with whom the other members of the Court agreed, was making any such distinction.
Tarom's case in relation to 2007/8
"4 Any and all such dates during the period from 1st September 2006 to 31st August 2007 as may be specified in a notice from the Customer to the Contractor given not later than 1st December 2005 and which are confirmed by the Customer in a further notice to the Contractor given not later than 1st June 2006, together with any further date or dates specified by the Customer in such notice to the Contractor given not later that 1st June 2007.
5 Similarly to 4 above in respect of each period from 1st September to 31st August during each of the further three years of the Term, in the event that the Term is extended by the Customer in accordance with Article 14.
6 In relation to each Commencement Date the Customer will specify the category of Check to be carried out on the Aircraft to which such Work Commencement Date relates".
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS