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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> PT Putrabali Adyamulia v Société Est Epices [2003] EWHC 3089 (Comm) (19 May 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2003/3089.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 3089 (Comm) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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P.T. PUTRABALI ADYAMULIA |
Applicant Sellers |
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- and - |
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SOCIÉTÉ EST EPICES |
RespondentBuyers |
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Philip Edey (instructed by Holman Fenwick & Willan (in Folio 533) and Ince & Co. (in Folio 512)) for the Respondent Buyers
Hearing date: 24th March 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Havelock-Allan Q.C. :
"4. FINDINGS
Under a C&F contract Buyers can only accept liability when the goods are loaded on board the ship. The contract called for shipment without mention of any specific origin. The Shipment and Classification clause in IGPA contract no. 5 states that:
Clause 6
"shipment must be by a first class ship(s) classed not lower than 100 A1 in the Lloyd's Register or equivalent classification in any register which is a member of the International Association of Classification Societies"
The declaration was made in advance of the goods being loaded onto the ocean vessel giving the name of an unpowered barge, contrary to the terms of the contract. The declaration was thus defective. Buyers were entitled to object to the declaration within 3 days of tender, but were unable to do so, as they were unaware that the declaration was flawed. Buyers could not have objected to the declaration until they knew of the ship's classification. …
THE BOARD OF APPEAL HEREBY OVERTURNS THE ARBITRATION AWARD … AND FINDS THAT the Buyers were not in breach of contract for non-payment."
"Both sides, to a greater or lesser extent, appear to wish to rely on facts not found by the Board of Appeal. That may or may not prove necessary or appropriate, but it might be prudent to consider to what extent it is possible to agree any further facts over and above those expressly found by the Board, particularly where such can be proved or deduced from documents and/or are not controversial. I am not suggesting that an order under section 70(4) requiring further reasons will inevitably be necessary before the Court can properly consider the appeal but in the light of full argument of the issues such an order is an obvious possibility and I am merely concerned to try to avoid costs and delay if that is at all possible."
"6. SHIPMENT AND CLASSIFICATION: By first class ship(s) classed not lower than 100 A1 in the Lloyd's Register or equivalent classification in any register which is a member of the International Association of Classification Societies. The goods of the contract description to be shipped on ships which will proceed directly or indirectly on a geographical normal commercially acceptable route from the port of shipment to the port/s of destination. "Overseas ship"; "ocean-going ship", or similar words, shall mean a ship employed in carrying the contract goods on a sea-voyage from the port, place or country of shipment to the destination named in the contract direct or indirect with liberty to call and/or tranship at other ports. …
Where in any contract for goods sold for shipment it is expressly stipulated that shipment must be made on an ocean-going ship or ships, as defined above, a shipment shall be deemed not to have been made unless and until the contract goods are shipped on board the overseas ship. …
10. DECLARATION OF SHIPMENT: Notice giving name of ship and/or ships and/or ocean going ship/s, leading marks and other means of identification and/or bills of lading, date and numbers including container numbers where relevant shall be advised by shippers at time of shipment and by intermediate parties with due despatch. The time for making a declaration under this contract shall expire 72 hours before arrival of ship at port of discharge unless duration of voyage is less than seven days. …
A declaration or tender shall be deemed to be a good declaration or tender under a contract (but without prejudice to any question arising on points other than those concerning the declaration or tender) unless objection is made in writing by the Buyers to his Sellers concerned within three business days following the receipt of such declaration or tender, such objection to be passed on by intermediaries with due despatch. A declaration once made shall not be withdrawn, amended or replaced by another declaration or tender, except by mutual agreement.
11. LOSS OF SHIP: Should the ship or ships and the goods thereon which apply to this contract be lost, whether before or after declaration, Sellers shall tender complete set of shipping documents to Buyers as soon as fairly practicable after the loss is ascertained and Buyers shall pay cash in exchange for such documents, in order, within 14 days after presentation. …"
"(1) Where a sale contract incorporates the Declaration of Shipment clause of the IGPA Form 5 … how should a seller's compliance with this clause be determined? In particular;
(a) whether the Declaration of Shipment clause properly construed means that a notice of declaration is invalid if the notice of declaration does not specify the classification of the ship?
(b) whether a notice of declaration given in respect of shipment on board an "ocean going" and/or "unpowered" barge is a valid notice for the purposes of the Declaration of Shipment clause?
(c) whether failure by the buyers to object in writing within 3 business days following receipt of any notice of declaration made pursuant to the Declaration of Shipment clause precludes them from treating the notice of declaration as invalid?
(d) whether failure by the buyers to object in writing within 3 business days following receipt of any notice of declaration made pursuant to the Declaration of Shipment clause precludes them from treating the notice of declaration as invalid for the purposes of the Loss of Ship clause (clause 10)?
(2) Where a sale contract incorporates the Loss of Ship clause of the IGPA Form 5 … what is the meaning and the effect of the Loss of Ship clause where the ship and/or the goods are lost before or after a valid declaration by a seller?"
"It is clear from this paragraph in the award that the Board's decision effectively rested on two grounds: first, that the declaration itself did not comply with the contract; secondly, that the buyers were not prevented from objecting to it even though they had failed to do so within the time allowed by clause 10 because they did not know of the ship's classification within the three day period there prescribed. The board appears therefore to have treated the sellers as being in default for failing to make a contractual declaration of shipment and no doubt that reflected the way in which the case was argued before them.
Mr Ashcroft, who has appeared on the appeal on behalf of the sellers, submitted that the Board of Appeal was wrong on both counts. As to the declaration of shipment itself, he has submitted, first, that it was not premature because the contract did not require shipment for these purposes to be shipment on an ocean going vessel. Accordingly, the sellers were entitled to give a declaration of shipment in respect of the first vessel on to which the goods were loaded. Secondly, he submitted that the declaration of shipment did not have to state the classification of the vessel and therefore to the extent that the Board proceeded on the basis that a declaration naming a vessel which was not classed in accordance with the requirements of the contract was defective, its decision was wrong.
In The Vladimir Ilich [1975] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 322 Donaldson J. pointed out that where a contract for the sale of unascertained goods calls for a notice of appropriation the notice is a matter of contract, not of performance. In other words by giving a notice of appropriation the seller is identifying the ship on which the goods he will deliver are being or will be carried. What matters therefore is whether the notice is given in the right form at the right time. If, as in that case, the notice names a non-existent vessel the seller will find himself unable to perform his contract when the time comes, but that does not make the notice itself bad.
The declaration of shipment required by clause 10 IGPA form No. 5 is a statement of a similar kind. It is intended to identify the vessel on which the goods which the seller intends to appropriate to the contract have been shipped. It is not in itself a matter of performance.; that comes later. But it informs the buyer of the manner in which the seller intends in due course to perform and commits the seller to tender performance in that way. As such I agree with Mr Ashcroft that all that is necessary for the declaration of shipment to be effective so as to comply with the requirements of the contract is that it be given in the right form at the right time.
It follows that the fact, if it be the case, that the ship named in the declaration of shipment is not an ocean going vessel does not affect the validity of the declaration itself. But quite apart from that, the reference to "ships and/or ocean going ships" in clause 10 makes it clear that the ship identified in the declaration of shipment may or may not be an ocean going vessel. This reflects the provision in clause 6 that where it is expressly stipulated in the contract that the shipment must be made on an ocean going vessel, the shipment shall be deemed not to have been made until the goods have been shipped on an ocean going vessel. In other cases, as here, shipment on a non-ocean going vessel will satisfy the requirements of the contract.
There is nothing in clause 10 of the contract form which requires the seller to include in his declaration of shipment a statement as to the vessel's class. The omission of any such reference cannot therefore render the declaration invalid. Moreover, the effect of the last paragraph of clause 10 is to render a declaration of shipment effective unless the buyer objects to it within the limited period provided. The clause does not make any exceptions to that and none in my view can properly be implied. Certainty in matters of this kind is of real importance because traders need to know whether notices of this kind are effective and can be relied upon. It is a consideration not confined to commodity traders. In the shipping context one of the best known examples is the Centrocon arbitration clause under which claims are deemed to be waived and absolutely barred unless made within three months of discharge. Such a clause has been held to deprive the charterer of the right to make a claim against the ship owner after the expiry of the three month period even though he may not have been aware of his right to make such a claim before the period expired.
It appears from the way in which the Board of Appeal has summarised the parties' submissions in paragraphs 2 and 3 of its award that the buyers did not rely on any grounds in support of their refusal to pay for the documents other than the seller's failure to make a valid declaration of shipment. Whether they could have done so or not is not a matter with which I am concerned.
For the reasons I have given I have reached the conclusion that the Board of Appeal was wrong to hold that the declaration of shipment in this case was defective and was also wrong to reach the conclusion that the buyers, having failed to make any objection within the three days provided by the contract, were nonetheless entitled to treat the declaration as flawed. In those circumstances the conclusion of the Board of Appeal cannot stand and the appeal must be allowed."
"… the term is more correctly described as a stipulation than a promise. The promise is to ship the goods. The term restricts the ways in which the seller can contractually perform that promise. It is in an all or nothing situation. Either the ship is a contractual ship, in which case the shipment discharges the promise, or the ship is non-contractual, in which case the shipment is nugatory unless and until the buyer with knowledge of the relevant facts chooses to accept it."
"The purpose of this provision is to enable a respondent to an application for leave to appeal to submit on that application that leave should be refused because the award has not been shown to be wrong, but by reason of grounds other than those expressed in the award. The requirement that the notice be served not less than two clear days before the hearing of the application is to enable the applicant to know in advance what arguments the respondent proposes to raise on the application for leave. What is quite clear is that the provision contemplates that any additional grounds must be raised on the hearing of the application for leave to appeal so that in reaching his decision on that application the Judge can look at all the arguments for and against upholding the award. For this reason the defendants' notice of additional grounds is expressly made part of the procedure leading up to the application for leave to appeal as distinct from the procedure leading up to the hearing of the substantive appeal. For these reasons, once the application for leave to appeal has been heard and determined in favour of the applicant, it is too late for a defendant to serve a notice of further reasons. The rules include no such provision and, for the reasons I have given, it is not difficult to see why.
That being so, the attempt by the defendants in the present appeal to serve a notice of additional grounds in the period between the granting of leave to appeal and the hearing of the appeal was out of time and ineffective and there can be no question of extending the time for such service to cure the delay."
"In my judgment, sufficient facts are found by the umpire to justify the conclusion – indeed, to force the conclusion – that a bill of lading on a sailing ship was not the usual bill of lading in this trade, and that therefore a bill of lading making a contract for the carriage of goods in a sailing vessel was not a due performance of this contract, and might have been rejected. But it has been accepted, and the buyers are entitled to the alternative remedy for breach of the contract in sending goods upon a sailing ship."