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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Navig8 Chemicals Pool Inc v Glencore Agriculture BV [2018] EWCA Civ 1901 (21 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1901.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 1901 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Andrew Baker
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SIMON
and
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
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Navig8 Chemicals Pool Inc |
Claimant (Respondent) |
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and |
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Glencore Agriculture BV |
Defendant (Appellant) |
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Mr Michael Ashcroft QC and Mr Oliver Caplin (instructed by Ince & Co LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 11 July 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon:
Introduction
The facts
(1) By two letters of indemnity addressed to Glencore and dated 22 March 2016, Aavanti requested that delivery be made without production of bills of lading to Ruchi (or to such party as Glencore believed to be, to represent, or to be acting on behalf of Ruchi) ('the Aavanti LOIs'). One of these letters of indemnity requested delivery of 4,000 m.t. 'at the port of Mangalore, India', and the other requested delivery of 2,000 m.t. 'at Kakinada, India.'
(2) By two letters of indemnity addressed to Navig8 and dated 6 April and 13 April 2016, for 4,000 m.t. and 2,000 m.t. respectively, Glencore requested that delivery be made without production of bills of lading to Aavanti (or to such party as Navig8 believed to be, to represent, or to be acting on behalf of Aavanti) ('the Glencore LOIs'). Both of the Glencore LOIs requested that delivery be 'at New Mangalore or Kakinada, India'.
(3) By letters of indemnity deemed to have been issued by Navig8 addressed to the head owners, otherwise on terms identical to the Glencore LOIs, Navig8 requested that delivery be made without production of bills of lading to Aavanti (or to such party as head owners believed to be, to represent, or to be acting on behalf of Aavanti) ('the Navig8 LOIs'). It was common ground between head owners and Glencore at trial that the Navig8 LOIs were issued by operation of clause 87 of the time charter.
1. To indemnify you, your servants and agents and to hold all of you harmless in respect of any liability, loss, damage or expense of whatsoever nature which you may sustain by reason of delivering the cargo in accordance with our request.
2. In the event of any proceedings being commenced against you or any of your servants or agents in connection with the delivery of the cargo as aforesaid, to provide you or them on demand with sufficient funds to defend the same.
5. As soon as all original bills of lading for the above cargo shall have come into our possession, to deliver the same to you, or otherwise cause all original bills of lading to be delivered to you, whereupon our liability hereunder shall cease.
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7. This indemnity shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law and each and every person liable under this indemnity shall at your request submit to the jurisdiction of the High Court of Justice of England.
If bills of lading are not available at the discharge port, owner to release a cargo against receipt of charterer's letter of indemnity in the form of owner's P & I club wording but same without bank guarantee as per owners P & I club wording.
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The period of validity of any letter of indemnity will be 3 months from date of issue. The period may be extended, as necessary, upon owners written request for further extension and confirmation (at time of extension request) that 1/3 original bills of lading have not been surrendered to owner. In absence of extension requests the indemnity will expire at the end of initial three month period, or any further extension period.
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The issues
The Judge's conclusion on the issues
The language of clause 38 falls to be construed in the light of [the Glencore LOI] language, since it is the language of the International Clubs' standard form LOI contemplated by clause 38. Both on its own terms, and read in the light of paragraph 5 of the LOIs, in my judgment clause 38 does not have the effect contended for by Mr Young QC. The language of clause 38 neither says in terms, nor conveys nor implies, that there is a limitation upon the validity of any LOI issued pursuant to clause 38, or upon Glencore's liability under any such LOI, by reference to a period for claims to be made by Navig8. The subject matter is delivery without production of bills of lading, effected by the vessel at the request of Glencore as voyage charterer. To say in that context that any LOI issued is to be valid for a period of three months is to say that it covers such deliveries effected during that three-month period, unless there is language indicating a different intention.
The first issue
I will now state why I think that, even although there is a definite written contract made between the parties, it is impossible to exclude from consideration what took place before the contract was made - in other words, their antecedent course of conduct. In the first place, although when the parties arrive at a definite written contract the implication or presumption is very strong that such contract is intended to contain all the terms of their bargain, it is a presumption only, and it is open to either of the parties to allege that there was, in addition to what appears in the written agreement, an antecedent express stipulation not intended by the parties to be excluded, but intended to continue in force with the express written agreement. That is a consideration which does not apply to this case, because the plaintiffs are not relying upon an express antecedent stipulation in addition to what is to be found in the written contract.'
The goods have been delivered so owners are entitled to enforce the LOI. LOIs, particularly those in standard form are important commercial instruments which need to be interpreted robustly and in a straightforward way.
The second issue
Conclusion
Lady Justice Asplin
Sir Geoffrey Vos (Chancellor of the High Court)