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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sveriges Angfartygs Assurans Forening (The Swedish Club) & Ors v Connect Shipping Inc & Anor, Re Renos [2018] EWCA Civ 230 (19 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/230.html Cite as: [2018] 2 All ER (Comm) 575, [2018] WLR(D) 104, [2018] 1 Lloyd's Rep 285, [2018] Bus LR 1333, [2018] EWCA Civ 230 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE KNOWLES CBE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SIMON
and
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
____________________
(1) SVERIGES ANGFARTYGS ASSURANS FORENING (THE SWEDISH CLUB) (2) REAAL SCHADEVERZEKERINGEN N.V. (3) THE PEOPLE'S INSURANCE COMPANY OF CHINA (PICC) PROPERTY & CASUALTY CO LTD (4) WARTA S.A. INSURANCE AND REINSURANCE COMPANY |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) CONNECT SHIPPING INC (2) MACHRIMAR MANAGEMENT SA |
Respondents |
____________________
Steven Berry QC (instructed by Hill Dickinson) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 30/31 January 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN :
Introduction
(1) Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that the Owners had not lost the right to abandon the Vessel and claim CTL pursuant to s.62(3) of the Marine Insurance Act 1906 ("the MIA").
(2) Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that the Vessel was a CTL, and, in particular, to hold that (a) costs incurred prior to the date of the NOA and (b) SCOPIC costs could be counted as "costs of repairs" for the purposes of the CTL calculation.
(3) Whether the judge was wrong in his conclusion as to the amount of the recoverable sue and labour expenses.
Factual background
"He has to choose what to do with the ship. If he wants to follow the repair or CTL route then, the ship will be scrutinised to death in order to establish the reasonable cost of repairs and the cost of repairs will not remain in estimation levels but we will ask for binding quotations from shipyards and repair contractors. This is a long and laborious process."
"With regard to the inspection of the ship, requested by the underwriters in previous correspondence, with the view to draft repair specification and invite tenders to quote, this demand is maintained and arrangements are currently under way to dispatch the surveyor and shipyard to inspect the damage. Underwriters under the cl. 10 of the policy conditions are entitled not only to inspect the casualty to their satisfaction but also to choose the place/port where repairs should be effected. The inspection that took place by the underwriters' surveyor when the ship was under LoF is not considered sufficient to draft a detailed quotation for such extensive damage."
"It is ultimately a matter for owners if, where and when the vessel is to be repaired. To date no such decision has been made. Underwriters have already stated, during the technical meeting of 21st January 2013, that if the Vessel is to be repaired their preferred choice of shipyard is either Constanta shipyard to the North or Dubai shipyard to the South depending on whether Owners decide to go North or South. Underwriters do not consider any further technical discussion on the repair specification to be necessary. However and for the avoidance of doubt, Underwriters reserve their rights in relation to Mr Costouros' report and to the contents of the repair specification generally.
Underwriters have provided their input in accordance with tender clause and Clause 10.2 of the ITC and have nothing further to add at this stage. The decision of whether and when to repair the vessel lies with Owners and Underwriters urge Owners to make a prompt decision as to what to do with their vessel. In this respect, Underwriters' note that the quotations received from Constanta and Dubai have already expired (25th and 26th January 2013). As to where the vessel should be repaired, ultimately this is a matter for Owners, but Underwriters have expressed their preferred choice as above."
Issue (1) - Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that the Owners had not lost the right to abandon the Vessel and claim CTL.
The law
"60. (1) Subject to any express provision in the policy, there is a constructive total loss where the subject-matter insured is reasonably abandoned on account of its actual total loss appearing to be unavoidable, or because it could not be preserved from actual total loss without an expenditure which would exceed its value when the expenditure had been incurred.
(2) In particular, there is a constructive total loss—
(i) Where the assured is deprived of the possession of his ship or goods by a peril insured against, and (a) it is unlikely that he can recover the ship or goods, as the case may be, or (b) the cost of recovering the ship or goods, as the case may be, would exceed their value when recovered; or
(ii) In the case of damage to a ship, where she is so damaged by a peril insured against that the cost of repairing the damage would exceed the value of the ship when repaired.
In estimating the cost of repairs, no deduction is to be made in respect of general average contributions to those repairs payable by other interests, but account is to be taken of the expense of future salvage operations and of any future general average contributions to which the ship would be liable if repaired; or
(iii) In the case of damage to goods, where the cost of repairing the damage and forwarding the goods to their destination would exceed their value on arrival.
61. Where there is a constructive total loss the assured may either treat the loss as a partial loss, or abandon the subject-matter insured to the insurer and treat the loss as if it were an actual total loss.
62. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section, where the assured elects to abandon the subject-matter insured to the insurer, he must give notice of abandonment. If he fails to do so the loss can only be treated as a partial loss.
(2) Notice of abandonment may be given in writing, or by word of mouth, or partly in writing and partly by word of mouth, and may be given in any terms which indicate the intention of the assured to abandon his insured interest in the subject-matter insured unconditionally to the insurer.
(3) Notice of abandonment must be given with reasonable diligence after the receipt of reliable information of the loss, but where the information is of a doubtful character the assured is entitled to a reasonable time to make inquiry.
(4) Where notice of abandonment is properly given, the rights of the assured are not prejudiced by the fact that the insurer refuses to accept the abandonment.
(5) The acceptance of an abandonment may be either express or implied from the conduct of the insurer. The mere silence of the insurer after notice is not an acceptance.
(6) Where notice of abandonment is accepted the abandonment is irrevocable. The acceptance of the notice conclusively admits liability for the loss and the sufficiency of the notice.
(7) Notice of abandonment is unnecessary where, at the time when the assured receives information of the loss, there would be no possibility of benefit to the insurer if notice were given to him.
(8) Notice of abandonment may be waived by the insurer.
(9) Where an insurer has re-insured his risk, no notice of abandonment need be given by him.
63. (1) Where there is a valid abandonment the insurer is entitled to take over the interest of the assured in whatever may remain of the subject-matter insured, and all proprietary rights incidental thereto.
(2) Upon the abandonment of a ship, the insurer thereof is entitled to any freight in course of being earned, and which is earned by her subsequent to the casualty causing the loss, less the expenses of earning it incurred after the casualty; and, where the ship is carrying the owner's goods, the insurer is entitled to a reasonable remuneration for the carriage of them subsequent to the casualty causing the loss.
….
88. Where by this Act any reference is made to reasonable time, reasonable premium, or reasonable diligence, the question of what is reasonable is a question of fact."
(1) Did the Owners receive "reliable information of the loss"?
(2) If so, was the NOA given "with reasonable diligence" thereafter?
(3) If not, and the information was of doubtful character, did the Owners exceed the "reasonable time" allowed "to make inquiry".
"As the effect of a valid notice of abandonment, if accepted, is to give the underwriters a title to the abandoned property (or salvage), and as the ultimate value of such property may be considerably affected by the promptitude with which measures are taken to effect either its sale or recovery, it is obviously just that the assured, if he means to abandon, and thereby throw upon the underwriters the ownership of the thing insured, should give them notice of his intention to do so within a reasonable time after receiving intelligence of the loss, in order that they may take immediate steps for turning the property thus cast upon their hands to the best account."
See Roux v Salvador (1836) 3 Bing N.C. at 281 (Lord Abinger); see also Kaltenbach v Mackenzie (1878) 3 CPD 467, at 479 (Cotton LJ).
The judgment
(1) The nature of the casualty was such that achieving reliable information of the loss would be a complex task and take time [10].
(2) Throughout the period from the casualty to the giving of NOA, the Owners were in receipt of conflicting information from experienced sources on the estimated cost of repairs [10].
(3) It was not realistic to take one source in isolation; the presence of conflicting information from other sources threw the reliability of any one source into question [11].
(4) The assessment to be made was a major one for any person to make, if it was to be undertaken reasonably and responsibly [11].
(5) This was a case where repair quotations from shipyards were required in order to achieve reliable information of the loss, given the conflicting estimates from experienced sources [17].
(6) The task was made more complex and slower because of the approach taken on behalf of the Insurers, putting forward figures that would not support a CTL, creating a competing specification, and emphasising that there would be adverse financial consequences for the Owners if the Owners chose a yard for repairs that was not agreed. This made it harder to get to a reliable picture of true costs of repair and caused things to take longer [23-24].
(1) Did the Owners receive "reliable information of the loss"?
(2) If the Owners had reliable information of the loss on 25 January 2013, was the NOA given "with reasonable diligence" thereafter?
(3) If there was no reliable information of the loss did the Owners exceed the "reasonable time" allowed "to make inquiry".
Conclusion on Issue (1)
Issue (2)(a): Whether the judge was wrong to hold that costs incurred prior to the date of the NOA could be counted as "cost of repairs" for the purposes of the CTL calculation.
"In estimating the cost of repairs, no deduction is to be made in respect of general average contributions to those repairs payable by other interests, but account is to be taken of the expense of future salvage operations and of any future general average contributions to which the ship would be liable if repaired…"
"No claim for constructive total loss based upon the cost of recovery and/ or repair of the Vessel shall be recoverable hereunder unless such cost would exceed the insured value …"
(1) It is supported by the only two authorities in which this question had previously arisen - Hall v Hayman (1912) 17 Comm Cas 81 and The Medina Princess [1965] 1 Lloyd's Rep 361.
(2) As a matter of principle and logic, because whether a vessel is a CTL for the purposes of s.60(2)(ii) can be tested by asking at the date of the NOA whether a prudent uninsured shipowner would choose to repair the vessel rather than leaving her where she lies (the "prudent uninsured shipowner test") – see, for example, Sailing Ship 'Blairmore' Co v Macredie [1898] AC 593, 603 (Lord Watson).
(3) S.60(2)(ii) makes it clear that only "future" salvage and general average costs can be counted towards the CTL calculation. This shows that past salvage and general average costs do not count and there is no logical reason to treat other types of expenses any differently.
"… The practice is to allow such expenses to rank towards a constructive total loss, and it appears that the United States' courts have uniformly followed the same course. It is submitted that in principle the rule must be that the assured should not be penalised by having incurred some expense before he gives notice, which may indeed be essential if he is to form a judgment as to whether the facts justify abandonment, and that he is entitled when deciding whether to abandon to have regard to the totality of the repairing cost, not merely to those costs which have yet to be incurred."
"This brings me to a further problem in relation to salvage operations, namely the inclusion of the word "future" in the section. Future from what time base? In Hall v Hayman (1912) 17 Comm. Cases 81 it was conceded and assumed that the moment for categorising a salvage operation as "future" was when notice of abandonment was given. But this cannot be right because it ignores the distinction between the factual situation of a vessel being a constructive total loss and an election to treat her as a total loss for purposes of a claim on underwriters. The owner has to do his sums and take account of future salvage operations before he elects to treat the vessel as a total loss. It is only after he elects that he gives notice of abandonment. In my view, which is shared by the learned editors of Arnold (16th edition, para 1203) the relevant date is the date of the casualty."
"In estimating the cost of repairs I do not think I have anything to do with the underwriters. It is all upon the assumption as to what a prudent uninsured owner would do, and I have to see whether on December 9 the cost of the repairs, as stated in the Act, including those items which are mentioned in the Act, would or would not exceed the value when repaired. I cannot take into consideration anything that was done before, which, as a matter of fact, neither improved the position nor worsened it. Therefore I cannot allow this item."
"the part of section 60(ii) that contains the word 'future' simply provides that account is to be taken of the expense of salvage operations and of any general average contributions to which the ship would be liable where they are in the future. It does not exclude from the account the expense of such operations and contributions where they are not in the future. As Donaldson LJ said, extra-judicially, in an address to the 113th General Meeting of the Association of Average Adjusters in 1982: 'All that section 60(ii) is concerned with is whether the cost of repairing the damage would exceed a certain figure and we are bidden, in estimating the cost of those repairs, to take account of the expense of future salvage operations'.
Issue (2)(b): Whether the judge was wrong to hold that SCOPIC costs could be counted as "cost of repairs" for the purposes of the CTL calculation.
(1) SCOPIC costs are not, properly understood, a "cost of repair" for the purpose of s.60(2)(ii) of the MIA and/or clauses 19.2 and 9.2.
(2) The Owners are contractually precluded, by paragraph 15 of the SCOPIC clause, from counting SCOPIC costs as part of the CTL calculation.
"any liability to pay such SCOPIC remuneration shall be that of the Shipowner alone and no claim whether direct, indirect, by way of indemnity or recourse or otherwise relating to SCOPIC remuneration in excess of the Article 14 Award shall be made in General Average or under the vessel's Hull and Machinery Policy by the owners of the vessel."
Conclusion on Issue (2)
Issue (3) - Whether the judge was wrong in his conclusion as to the amount of the recoverable sue and labour expenses.
"It was not in dispute that to the extent that costs were reasonably and properly incurred for the purposes of averting or minimizing a loss which would have been recoverable under the hull and machinery policies, the Insurers are liable to indemnify in relation to such costs."
"I am satisfied that those (reduced) costs of attendance of a tug that I have identified above, in the total sum of US$1.2 million, were reasonably and properly incurred to avert or minimise loss which would have been recoverable under the policies".
Conclusion on Issue (3)
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE SIMON:
SIR GEOFFREY VOS, CHANCELLOR OF THE HIGH COURT: