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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Portolana Compania Naviera Ltd. v Vitol S.A. Inc & Anor [2003] EWHC 1904 (Comm) (29 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2003/1904.html Cite as: [2003] 2 Lloyd's Rep 671, [2003] EWHC 1904 (Comm), [2004] 1 All ER (Comm) 269, [2003] 2 LLR 671 |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PORTOLANA COMPANIA NAVIERA LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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VITOL S.A., INC VITOL S.A. OF SWITZERLAND |
Defendants |
____________________
Thomas Macey-Dare (instructed by Stephenson Harwood) for the Defendants
Hearing dates : 8 and 9 July 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tomlinson:
(i) 20,000 tonnes min/max at the M'bao sealine;
(ii) 10,000 tonnes min/max at the SAR terminal for account of SAR, and
(iii) 5,250 tonnes min/max at the SAR terminal for account of Addax/Oryx Senegal.
SAR is an acronym for Societe Africaine De Raffinage, owners and operators of both the sealine and a terminal in the port with a traditional discharging berth.
" 6. NOTICE OF READINESS. Upon arrival at customary anchorage at each port of loading or discharge, the Master or his agent shall give the Charterer or his agent notice by letter, telegraph, wireless or telephone that the vessel is ready to load or discharge cargo, berth or no berth, and laytime, as hereinafter provided, shall commence upon the expiration of six (6) hours after receipt of such notice, or upon the vessel's arrival in berth (i.e. finished mooring when at sealoading or discharging terminal and all fast when loading or discharging alongside a wharf) whichever first occurs. However irrespective of whether the berth is reachable on arrival or not, except where berth is not reachable due to another vessel occupying berth and carrying out cargo operations, otherwise after tendering Notice of Readiness where delays are incurred due to circumstances which fall under charter party Part 1 additional clauses 5/29/31/35/36/38 and Part II Clause 7 and 8 as amended. The reductions and exceptions so provided will prevail regardless of whether or not the berth was reachable on Vessel's arrival. Furthermore, where delays occur and/or demurrage shall be incurred at ports of loading and/or discharge by reason of act of god, act of war, act of public enemies, riot, civil commotion or arrest or restraint of princes, rulers or people, such delays shall count as half laytime or if on demurrage, the rate of demurrage shall be reduced ½ of the amount stated in Part I per running hour or pro rata for part of an hour for demurrage so incurred.
Where delay is caused to Vessel getting into berth after giving notice of readiness for any reason over which Charterer has no control, such delay shall not count as used laytime or demurrage. In any event Charterer shall be entitled to six hours notice of readiness at loading and discharging ports, even if the vessel is on demurrage.
7. HOURS FOR LOADING AND DISCHARGING. The number of running hours specified as laytime in Part I shall be permitted the Charterer as laytime for loading and discharging cargo….. Time consumed by the vessel in moving from loading and discharge port anchorage to her loading or discharging berth…. shall not count as used laytime or time on demurrage.
8. DEMURRAGE. Charterer shall pay demurrage per running hour and pro rata for a part thereof at the rate specified in Part I for all time that loading and discharging and used laytime as elsewhere herein provided exceeds the allowed laytime elsewhere herein specified. If, however, delays occur and/or demurrage shall be incurred at ports of loading and/or discharge by reason of … storm…. breakdown of machinery or equipment in or about the plant of the Charterer … or consignee of the cargo, such delays shall count as half laytime or, if on demurrage, the rate of demurrage shall be reduced one half of the amount stated in Part I per running hour or pro rata for part of an hour for demurrage so incurred …. The Charterer shall not be liable for any delays caused by. …awaiting tide and/or awaiting daylight and/or awaiting pilot(s) and/or awaiting tugs(s).
9. SAFE BERTHING – SHIFTING. The vessel shall load and discharge at any safe place or wharf, or alongside vessels or lighters reachable on her arrival…. The Charterer shall have the right of shifting the vessel at ports of loading and/or discharge from one safe berth to another on payment of all towage and pilot age shifting to next berth, charges for running lines on arrival at and leaving that berth, additional agency charges and expenses, customs overtime and fees, and any other extra port charges or port expenses incurred by reason of using more than one berth. Time consumed on account of shifting shall count as used laytime except as otherwise provided in Clause 15.
10. PUMPING IN AND OUT. The cargo shall be … pumped out of the vessel at the expense of the vessel, but at the risk and peril of the vessel only so far as the vessel's permanent hose connections, where delivery of the cargo shall be taken by the Charterer or its consignees…
11. HOSES: MOORING AT SEA TERMINALS. Hoses for loading and discharging shall be furnished by the Charterer, and shall be connected and disconnected by the Charterer, or, at the option of the Owner, by the Owner at the Charterer's risk and expense. Laytime shall continue until the hoses have been disconnected….
12. DUES, TAXES – WHARFAGE. … The vessel shall be free of charges for the use of any wharf, dock, place or mooring facility arranged by the Charterer for the purpose of loading or discharging cargo…
ADDITIONAL CLAUSES
8. Claims Clause
Charterer shall be discharged and released from all liability in respect of any claims Owner(s) may have under this Charter Party (such as but not limited to, claims for deadfreight, demurrage, port expenses, shifting expenses), unless claim has been presented in writing to Charterer with all available supporting documents within 90(ninety) days from completion of discharge of cargo carried under this Charter Party.
31. Operational Compliance Clause
Owner shall indemnify Charterer for any damages, delays, costs and consequences of not complying with Charterer's voyage instructions given in accordance with the Charter Party…
If a conflict arises between terminal orders and Charterer's voyage instructions, the Master shall stop cargo operations and contact Charterer immediately. The terminal orders shall never supersede Charterer's voyage instructions and any conflict shall be resolved prior to resumption of cargo operations…. "
a. Clause 6
The Charterers assert that the periods between (i) 1700 hours on 12 July 2001 and 1600 hours on 21 July 2001 and (ii) 1300 on 22 July 2001 and 1730 hours on 29 July 2001 constituted delays getting into berth over which the Charterers had no control. Thus laytime and/or demurrage do not run for these periods.
b. Clause 7
The Charterers assert that the periods between (i) 1100 hours and 1600 hours on 21 July 2001 and (ii) 1130 hours and 1730 hours on 29 July 2001 constituted time used in moving from discharge port anchorage to the berth. Thus laytime and/or demurrage do not run for these periods.
c. Clause 8
The Charterers assert that the period between 2300 hours on 10 July 2001 and 2015 hours on 29 July 2001 constituted a delay caused by a breakdown of machinery or equipment in or about the plant of the consignee. Thus laytime and/or demurrage run at only half rate for these periods.
I will examine each of these assertions in turn.
I do not consider that the Charterers can avail themselves of this clause. There is first the consideration that, during some albeit small part of the time in question, the vessel was either actively proceeding from or actively proceeding to the berth, or rather the sealine, time which it is surely quite impossible to characterise as delay getting into berth. However I do not believe that any of the time in question should be so characterised. Clause 6 is headed "Notice of Readiness" and as it makes explicitly clear is concerned with what happens upon arrival of the vessel at a port and after giving Notice of Readiness. In my judgment it cannot be sensibly be read as applying to events subsequent to the vessel's first berthing at a port. As it was put by Lord Goff in relation to a very similar clause in Societe Anonyme Marocaine De L'Industrie Du Raffinage v. Notos Maritime Corporation (the "Notos") 1987 1 LLR 503 at p.507: -
" ….the delay there referred to is postponement of the time ( for any reason whatsoever over which the Charterers have no control) when the vessel, having arrived at the port and given Notice of Readiness, can get into her berth."
The shape of the charter is such that the regime that will be applicable once the vessel has first berthed after arrival is to be found in the clauses which follow. Mr Macey-Dare suggested that this approach produces anomalous and uncommercial results. He gave as an example the case of a vessel which arrived at a load port and was directed to an available sea berth, but was subsequently ordered off the berth because of heavy swell. He suggested that in such a case laytime would run and/or the vessel would incur demurrage whilst she lay at anchor waiting for the swell to subside, whereas another vessel arriving at around the same time which did not manage to berth before the swell arose would be entitled to rely upon the last sentence of clause 6 whilst she lay at anchor. However I do not find this result at all surprising. It is a commonplace with voyage charters that the allocation of risk measured in the running of time will be dependent upon the particular stage in the maritime adventure which has been reached. Thus, classically, the running of time may depend upon whether the ship is or is not an "arrived ship," the resolution of which question may itself, as the many reported cases demonstrate, depend upon the very finest of distinctions. I might also note that, on Mr Macey-Dare's approach, clause 6 would not have afforded any relief to the Charterers in the event that it had proved possible to effect the necessary repairs whilst the vessel remained at the berth. However the short point is that commercial men would not in my judgment describe the delay which here occurred as delay getting into berth. They would say that there had been a problem after the vessel had got into berth which gave rise to delay in discharging.
I do not consider that the last sentence of this clause is concerned with the situation where the vessel is required to leave berth before the loading or discharging anticipated to be carried out there has been completed. On the contrary, the last sentence is plainly concerned only with the time spent actually moving from anchorage to berth and in two distinct activities, which may be carried out either at anchorage or at berth, which will probably delay the beginning of the loading or discharge operation as the case may be. If this provision was intended to have application to time spent in movements of the vessel after the vessel has berthed, I would expect it to exclude time consumed by the vessel moving to the anchorage as well as time spent moving from the anchorage. Whilst laytime and demurrage exceptions routinely have as their trigger the reaching of a defined stage in the adventure, one should strive to construe them in such a way as to result in the same treatment for essentially similar activity at any given stage of the adventure. Thus in the present case it would be utterly capricious to exclude from the running of time the second and third movements from the anchorage to the sealine but not to exclude from the running of time the first and second movements from the sealine to the anchorage. For reasons very similar to those which informed my conclusion on the last sentence of clause 6 it seems to me that movements from the berth to the anchorage and from the anchorage back to the first or to a different berth are governed by the second sentence of clause 9. The provision in clause 7 is, so far as concerns time spent in movement of the vessel, by implication from the shape of the charter as a whole confined to the period spent in carrying out the first operation of shifting from anchorage to berth after arrival at the port. I am gratified to see that that is a conclusion shared by the learned authors of Cooke and others Voyage Charters, 2nd Edition, at para.57.21.
The principal point which I have to decide is whether what here occurred can properly be described as "breakdown of equipment in or about the plant of the consignee of the cargo." I do not need to decide whether this long and substantial submarine pipe can properly be described as equipment, although as Robert Goff J observed in Olbena S.A v. Psara Maritime Inc, "The Thanassis A", unreported, 22 March 1982, piping can legitimately be called equipment in or about the plant of the supplier or consignee of the cargo in the context of a charterparty for a tanker. He was there referring to pipes supported on or by an oil jetty, but it may be arguable that there is in this context no real distinction between such pipes and a sealine for the purposes of this characterisation. On the other hand I note that in that case Robert Goff J did not regard the jetty itself as equipment, and so here I would find it hard to describe the concrete encasing the sealine as "equipment." However I will assume that the relevant gap in the flange was here located in equipment, which assumed equipment was assuredly in or about the plant of the consignee. Like Robert Goff J I find it very difficult to apply the expression "breakdown" to equipment other than machinery. In that case Robert Goff J said this : -
" No doubt the words " breakdown of machinery" might be limited, in the appropriate context, to the colloquial expression "breakdown" when used, for example, in relation to the breakdown of a motor car. But I find it very difficult to apply that expression in relation to equipment other than machinery. In the case for example of an oil jetty, the relevant equipment may include not merely machinery, but, for example, pipes; and it seems to me that piping can legitimately be called equipment in or about the plant of the supplier or consignee of the cargo in the context of a charterparty for a tanker. As I read the words "breakdown of machinery or equipment" they must in the present context go beyond the ordinary example of a machine breaking down due to its own inherent defect. Where there has been a breakdown of equipment in the context of this clause I can see no reason why it should not include, for example, a breakage in a pipe, and in those circumstances it is difficult to see why breakdown should be limited in this clause to something involving an inherent defect in the machinery or equipment.…………………………… The cause of the breakdown is immaterial. It could be some external agent, or it could be some internal defect in the machinery or equipment, but if the machinery or equipment does not function, and possibly also if it malfunctions, then there is a breakdown of the machinery or equipment."
Robert Goff J went on to observe that complete destruction of part of the facility, as had there occurred, would appear to involve something more than a breakdown.
Here of course I am concerned with a pipeline which no doubt functioned in the sense that it was capable of conveying oil along its length but which also malfunctioned in that it permitted a leak of such significance as to render it unusable. A smaller leak would, depending obviously upon its size, either have remained undetected or would even perhaps, if sufficiently insignificant, have been tolerated, at any rate for the duration of this discharge operation. I find support for this latter observation in the reported comments of the loading Master to which I have made reference in paragraph 18 above.
Taking all of the evidence into account is it appropriate to describe what here occurred as a breakdown of equipment? Whether it is appropriate so to describe it is a matter of impression, to which the duration of the problem, its cause and its magnitude can in my judgment all properly contribute, as can the remedial measures necessary. Here tightening of bolts securing the flange was to no avail as equally was sealing with quick drying cement. What ultimately was required was removal and replacement of the last twenty metre section of the fixed pipeline, albeit this vessel was able to complete her discharge following a temporary repair involving removal but not replacement of that length and the connection of additional flexible hosing to the flange left at the end of the pipeline.
In my judgment it is neither natural nor appropriate to describe as a breakdown the gap in the flange which permitted the leak, caused in the manner and over the period which it was. Nor do I regard the context in which the word is here used as compelling the conclusion that it must be regarded as a breakdown. It may be that in certain circumstances a problem which pre-dates the making of the charterparty can properly be described as a breakdown, but it must be obvious that the longer a problem has gone unremedied the more difficult it will be to characterise it as a breakdown in the context of a charterparty executed long after its initial occurrence. One can perhaps test the point by asking what would have been the position here had the sealine belonged to or been the responsibility of the Charterers of this vessel? The exception in clause 8 does not import any reference to a necessity for the relevant breakdown to be beyond the Charterers' control. Commercial men would in such circumstances surely demur to the suggestion that what here occurred could properly be described, in the context of this charter and as between Owner and Charterer, as a breakdown of equipment. In my judgment the word breakdown introduces some element of perceived fortuity even if the underlying cause demonstrates inevitability. I do not think that anything said by Sellers or Willmer LJJ in Reardon Smith Line v. Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food 1962 1 QB 42 (The Vancouver Strikes case) detracts from this conclusion. I simply do not think that informed commercial men would say, in the context of this laytime and demurrage exception, agreed 18 months after the initial damage was apparently done, and in the light of the subsequent problems and inaction, that there had been a breakdown of the consignee's equipment. I think that they would say that, Owners having agreed to discharge at Dakar, Charterers had then directed the vessel initially to discharge at a damaged and unusable sealine. Given that the vessel had too deep a draft to enter the port, the Charterers could of course have required the vessel to discharge into lighters. It would be very surprising in the light of the allocation of risk and responsibility in this charter as a whole to find that in such circumstances charterers were entitled to a reduction in the rate at which time counts for all the time lost as a consequence of their commercial decision to require discharge at the sealine.
In my judgment the Owners are entitled to recover the additional costs incurred by reason of the additional shifting operations on 12,21,22 and 29 July. In my judgment using the same berth three times over must on the facts of this case be regarded as an exercise by the Charterers of their right to require the vessel to shift from one safe berth to another. No one would have any difficulty with that that conclusion where, for example, the Charterers simply asked the Owners to cease discharge at berth A, to proceed to berth B and there to discharge 50% of the cargo and to return to berth A to discharge the balance. In my judgment what occurred here is in substance no different. The vessel was required to use the same berth three times, and to shift off and on to it again on two separate occasions, with waiting time in between as might have occurred in a shift from berth A to berth B. That must and in my judgment can for present purposes be regarded as a shift from one berth to another. Again, were it not so, arbitrary and capricious distinctions might follow. The Charterers might, for example, have reacted to the problem by directing the vessel to discharge into lighters. In other circumstances had there not been a draft restriction the Charterers might have directed the vessel to proceed to a fixed berth in substitution for the sealine. It would to my mind be odd if the expense associated with these latter shifts were recoverable by the Owners but not the expenses which they incurred by reason of being required to shift backwards and forwards as they did.
" UPON RECEIPT OF YOUR REPLY DATED 18/10/2001, THE D/A WAS PASSED ON TO MRSS CHARTERERS VITOL SO THAT BOTH PARTIES COME TO AN AGREEMENT REGARDING THE BREAKDOWN OF PORT EXPENSES AS PER CHARTER PARTY.
MRSS VITOL UNDERLINED THAT – GETMA NOT BEING A PARTY IN THE CHARTER – (TELEX IN QUOTE/UNQUOTE ENCLOSED) ISSUES CONCERNING D/A SHOULD ONLY BE RESOLVED BETWEEN RELEVANT CONTRACT PARTIES.
AS FAR AS GETMA ARE CONCERNED, WE WERE APPOINTED AS AGENTS BY OWNERS STEALTH MARITIME, LIABLE FOR PORT COSTS AND AS PER TODAY YOUR ACCOUNT SHOWS AN OVERDUE DEBIT BALANCE OF USD 181 350.61 FOR WHICH REMITTANCE SHOULD BE URGENTLY ARRANGED INTO OUR ACCOUNT SO AS TO CLOSE THIS FILE WITHOUT ANY PREJUDICE.
FAILING A POSITIVE ISSUE, WE'LL HAVE NO ALTERNATIVE BUT TO PASS THIS FILE ONTO OUR LEGAL DEPARTMENT.
WE DRAW TO YOUR ATTENTION TELEX RECEIVED FROM MRSS VITOL:
QUOTE
TO: GETMA INTERNATIONAL, PARIS
ATTN: FRANCOISE HENRY/SERVICE OPERATIONS
CC: VITOL SA, GENEVA
ATTN: CHRISTIAN HALLER
RE: MT AFRAPEARL – DAKAR 10/7/01 – OUR REF 42413
WE REFER TO YOUR LETTER DD 18/10/01 THAT ONLY RECENTLY RECEIVED IN OUR OFFICE.
WE NOTE THAT THE CHARGES APPARENTLY RELATE TO DISBURSEMENTS INCURRED DURING VESSEL'S PORT CALL AT DAKAR DURING 10/7 – 3/8/01. WE UNDERSTAND THAT THE VESSEL OWNER HAS INDICATED THAT HE DOES NOT AGREE WITH ALL COSTS BEING FRO HIS ACCOUNT AND HAS REQUESTED THAT YOU FORWARD THE DISBURSEMENTS ON TO CHARTERERS. THIS PROCEDURE IS OF COURSE INCORRECT AND IT IS NOT ACCEPTED BY US. WE WOULD STRONGLY RECOMMEND THAT YOU REMIND OWNER OF THEIR OBLIGATIONS TO YOURSELVES, ACTING AS VESSEL'S AGENTS, TO SETTLE THE OUTSTANDING DISBURSEMENTS IN FULL WITH YOURSELVES. IF OWNER BELIEVES THAT ANY OF THE DISBURSEMENTS ARE SUBSEQUENTLY RECLAIMABLE FROM CHARTERER UNDER THE TERMS OF THE CHARTER PARTY THEN THEY SHOULD PRESENT THEIR FULLY DOCUMENTED CLAIM TO CHARTERER IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE CHARTER PARTY.
YOU ARE OF COURSE NOT A PARTY TO THE CHARTER AND YOU ARE UNAWARE OF THE TERMS AGREED BETWEEN OWNER AND CHARTERER. ANY ISSUES CONCERNING DISBURSEMENTS AND/OR PORT COSTS UNDER THE CHARTER PARTY ARE TO BE RESOLVED BETWEEN THE RELEVANT CONTRACT PARTIES, WITHOUT INVOLVING YOURSELVES AS A THIRD PARTY. CHARTERER DOES NOT OF COURSE HAVE ANY CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIP WITH GETMA. ON THE OTHER HAND GETMA ARE ACTING AS THE VESSEL'S AGENTS AND OWNER OF THE VESSEL IS CONTRACTUALLY OBLIGED TO REIMBURSE YOU FOR ALL SUMS INCURRED IN RESPECT OF HANDLING OF THE VESSEL DURING VESSEL'S CALL IN DAKAR.
IN THE CIRCUMSTANCES YOU MUST TAKE THIS MATTER UP WITH VESSEL OWNER.
BEST REGARDS,
EWAN WARREN
VITOL SERVICES LTD
AS INSTRUCTED BY VITOL SA, GENEVA
290688 VLTLGL G#
getma a 642909f
UNQUOTE
REGARDS
F. HENRY
GETMA PARIS "
The quoted fax from Vitol to GETMA, had, as is now known, been sent by Vitol on 6 December 2001.
" MT AFRAPEARL C/P 3/5/01 OUR REF 42413
WE REFER TO OWNER'S REMINDERS IN RESPECT OF PENDING DEMURRAGE CLAIM. PLEASE INFORM OWNER THAT WE ARE CLOSE TO FINALISING OUR REVIEW OF THEIR CLAIM HOWEVER IN ORDER TO FINALISE SUCH REVIEW AND IN PARTICULAR THE DELAYS IN DAKAR, WE WOULD BE GRATEFUL TO RECEIVE A COPY OF THE DECK AND ENGINE LOG ABSTRACTS COVERING VESSEL'S CALL THERE. WE WOULD ALSO APPRECIATE TO RECEIVE A COPY OF THE RELEVANT CLASSIFICATION DOCUMENTATION IN RESPECT OF THE VESSEL'S ANCHOR CHAIN PERTINENT AT THE TIME OF THE VESSEL'S CALL AT DAKAR UNDER THIS CHARTER.
WITH REGARD TO REFERENCES TO ALLEGED 'ADDITIONAL D/A'DUE TO VESSEL'S PROTRACTED STAY AND REPEATED SHIFTING AT THE DISPORT, WE WOULD, WITHOUT PREJUDICE TO OUR POSITION IN GENERAL UNDER THE CHARTER, BE GRATEFUL TO RECEIVE A COPY OF OWNER'S CLAIM. WE WOULD ALSO REQUEST TO RECEIVE EVIDENCE OF FULL PAYMENT BY OWNER OF THESE DISBURSEMENTS.
WE WILL BE IN A POSITION TO REVERT MORE FULLY IN RESPECT OF BOTH THESE PENDING MATTERS ONCE THE AFOREMENTIONED DOCUMENTS HAVE BEEN RECEIVED AND REVIEWED BY US. "
It is to be noted that no reference was there made to any applicable time bar in respect of the alleged additional disbursements account due to the vessel's protracted stay and repeated shifting at the discharge port. On 24 April 2002 Mr Michael Smith of the Owners' solicitors Messrs Mills & Co sent a fax to Mr Ewan Warren, Claims Manager in the Legal and Claims Department of Vitol Services Ltd which included the following:-
" As you will see, GETMA are continuing to claim the sum of US$127,350.61 in respect of their alleged agency fees. As we have previously pointed out, any amount beyond the original estimate of US$56,997.18 would be for Charterers' account pursuant to clauses 11 and/or 9 of the charterparty. In the circumstances, we would have thought that the best way to deal with GETMA's claim would be for Charterers to negotiate directly with GETMA and to make the necessary payment. We should be grateful if you would let us know that you are contacting France P.and I. /GETMA directly to resolve this matter."
To this Mr Warren responded by e-mail on 1 May 2002 as follows: -
" With regard to your suggestion that Charterer negotiate and settle disbursements directly with GETMA, regret this cannot be accepted. Charterer has no contractual link with vessel's agents and has no liability to them. As you will be aware Owner is obliged to settle all disbursements with their agents directly. Should Owner believe that any element of the D/A could have been claimed under the charterparty then Owner should have presented their formal claim in accordance with the C/P terms and conditions. Since our conversation earlier we have noted from the C/P that the deadline for presentation for such claims was, as suspected, 90 days from completion of discharge and very strictly any claim Owner might now present would be time barred (in fact Owner only forwarded the GETMA invoice and vouchers after the deadline). We do however refer to our "without prejudice" comments in this respect."
" Additional Charges and Expenses
In addition to claims for demurrage the Claimant claims the sum of US$124,353.43 in respect of additional charges and other expenses. These claims are also denied. In any event, these claims are time barred because they were not presented to the Defendants within the time limit set out in clause 8 of Vitol's Voyage Charter Terms which forms part of the charterparty. Under clause 8 charterers are discharged from all claims owners may have unless the claim is presented to them in writing with all available supporting documents within 90 days from completion of discharge of the cargo. So far as I am aware, nothing was received in relation to these port expenses until 3 December 2001 when a bundle of documents was received by Vitol's SA's Geneva office from GETMA, the Dakar port agents. The bundle was faxed to me on the same day. This was a bundle containing, inter alia, twenty six (26) copies of invoices and vouchers from local port service providers. On 6 December I sent a telex to Getma acknowledging receipt of the documents and reminding them that we had no contractual relationship with them and that they should take up the matter of any outstanding disbursements with vessel owners. Subsequently on 13 December 2001 we received from the Claimant's agents, Stealth Maritime Corporation SA, some eighty six (86) documents, consisting largely of original invoices and vouchers from local port service providers, together with a covering letter requesting settlement of outstanding disbursements. No invoice from the Claimant, or breakdown of the costs they were claiming was included. The Claimants did not therefore present the claim for additional charges and expenses with all available supporting documents within 90 days of completion of discharge."
Messrs Mills & Co for the Claimants immediately responded by fax to the Defendants' solicitors Messrs Stephenson Harwood. In that fax Mr Smith of Messrs Mills & Co said this:-
" We refer to the statement of Mr Warren received by us on 9 May. Obviously all of our clients' rights in respect of late exchange of Witness Statements are reserved. We note, however, paragraph 14 of that statement. So far as we can see, this paragraph does not relate to an issue in the proceedings. We should be grateful if you would, therefore, clarify your clients' intentions. In particular do they intend to apply for leave to amend their Defence?
If your clients do intend to apply for leave to amend their Defence, our clients will resist any such application on the grounds that it is too late since extensive disclosure on this issue will be required (even most of the documents referred to paragraph 14 have not been disclosed by your clients) and there will be insufficient opportunity for our clients to deal with this matter properly with all of the relevant witnesses.
In any event, regardless of the eventual outcome at trial our clients will seek payment of all of their costs relating to the additional charges and expenses issue should any application for leave to amend your clients' Defence affect the outcome at trial of the former issue."
Even in response to that unequivocal request the Defendants' solicitors did not give a clear and unequivocal answer. Messrs Stephenson Harwood's reply of 23 May 2003 read as follows:-
" We refer to your fax of 13 May.
At present our clients reserve their position regarding seeking leave to amend their Defence.
As regards the grounds you raised to resist such an application, namely non-disclosure of documents and lack of opportunity for your clients to deal with the issue properly, we would make the following points:
1. There are very few documents on which our clients rely and they will be disclosed shortly. Your clients are aware of the documents.
2. The only issue is whether your clients complied with the provision of Clause 8 of the Charterparty. Clause 8 requires a claim to be presented within 90 days of completion of discharge of the cargo. This is clearly not a matter which will require a great deal of time or expense to investigate, nor will there be a great deal of witness evidence. We therefore see no prejudice to your client with an application to amend."
The position was therefore that the Defendants were unwilling to make clear whether they would at trial seek to rely upon the time bar. Messrs Mills for the Claimants wrote again on 29 May seeking elucidation of the position, but no such elucidation was forthcoming, no draft amendment was sent for consideration and no disclosure relevant to the issue was provided.
" It seems that GETMA sent some documents by DHL to Vitol SA Geneva on 18 October. On 23 November 2001 Christian Haller (Vitol SA, Geneva) spoke to GETMA (Paris). They claimed that they had already sent their claim to Vitol. Christian Haller could not find the documents in question and contacted DHL, who confirmed that an envelope had been delivered on 23 October 2001. As no such documents could be located in either Geneva or in London, Vitol asked GETMA to resend the documents (see pp 24-25 of EPW1). The resent documents were received by Vitol SA Geneva on 3 December (see EPW1 pp 5-20). I have since spoken to Christian Haller at Vitol SA, Geneva who has reviewed his files and has confirmed that there is no record of the letter from GETMA dated 18 October being received before 3 December 2001 and no other relevant documents."
I might mention in passing that Mr Warren has found himself obliged to prepare yet a Third Witness Statement because with his Second Witness Statement he omitted to include all the documents he had received from the Geneva office on 3 December. The documents apparently arrived in two faxes, as there was a problem faxing them all in one go. Mr Warren's Second Statement exhibited the first fax. With his Third Witness Statement he exhibited the second fax, which comprised some 17 or 18 further vouchers sent by GETMA.