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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Asia Pacific (HK) Ltd. & Ors v Hanjin Shipping Co Ltd (Hanjin Pennsylvania) [2005] EWHC 2443 (Comm) (07 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/2443.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2443 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ASIA PACIFIC (HK) LIMITED & OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) HANJIN SHIPPING CO LTD (2) OWNERS OF THE MV "HANJIN PENNSYLVANIA" |
Defendants |
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Mr Steven Berry, Q.C. (instructed by Hill Taylor Dickinson ) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 3rd November 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
"We refer to your fax of 15th March 2005
Attached please find a copy of the Claim Form issued by the Claimants represented by us
We are awaiting instructions as regards the proposed consolidation of actions"
The letter was accompanied by a copy of the claim form.
"Confirmed Waltons Morse served Claim Subs.
Re Consolidation – they have asked WM for general stay in proceedings until confirmation from other parties that actions can be consolidated
As to consolid – do not know when this will happen –everything is stayed until then
Advised we are awaiting instructions re consolid.."
"We confirm that the Claimants represented by us and who appear on the Claim Form forwarded to you on 21st March 2005 have no objection to their claims being consolidated into one Action"
What amounts to service?
The defendant's submissions
The claimant's submissions
Discussion
The judgments of the Court of Appeal
"Moreover, Branton were informed by Horwich that the original documents had been served on the defendant's registered office that same day. The only flaw in the process was that Horwich sent a copy of the issued claim form, rather than the original document itself. In this regard, it is to be noted that, if Horwich had sent the issued claim form to Branton by fax, that would have been good service. A document received by fax is a copy document. The circumstances revealed by this case do not precisely satisfy the Anderton[1] criteria: Branton received a document served by one of the permitted methods of service (i.e. by first class post on the right person at the right address) but it was a copy of the document that should have been served.
88 In these very unusual circumstances, had it been necessary to so, we would have decided that it was right to dispense with service under rule 6.9."
"what was sent was the original claim form that had been issued by the court, and it was clear that the claim forms were purportedly being served, albeit that they were deemed to be served out of time. The recipient knew that, on the assumption that what was sent amounted to valid service, time started to run from the date of service of the claim for certain purposes…
50 But in the present case Traymans did not purport to serve the claim form by sending the copy to Wyeth. On the contrary Traymans made it clear that they were not proposing to serve the claim form on 9th November…"
Conclusion
Extending time under CPR 7.6. (3)
(a) the fax with which he sent the claim form referred to taking instructions about proposed consolidation, a topic to which he later returned.
(b) the conversation between Mr Hoyes and Mr van der Reyden on 22nd March about consolidation, which he submits understandably led Mr van der Reyden to think that Mr Hoyes was proposing that all claims including that of the claimant should be stayed until the question of consolidation of all claims was resolved by the Court.
(c) his fax of 4th April confirming that consolidation was agreed;
(d) HTD's fax of 13th June inviting the claimants to attend the CMC in the limitation action– a pointless exercise if, as is now submitted, the claim had not been served and was thereby time barred.
Dispensing with service under CPR 6.9
"It is possible that the relationship between service under section 725 (1) and service under the CPR was not fully understood, and that the importance of serving on the party to be served the original claim form that had been issued (rather than a copy) was not appreciated. But in future the significance of these points will have to be taken in to account. Errors of this kind will generally not be regarded as good reasons for making an order under rule 6.9. In stipulating for a strict approach for the future in such circumstances, we have been guided by what was said in the Anderton and Wilkey cases"..
Note 1 Anderton v Clwyd County Council (No 2) [2002] 1 WLR 3174; [2002] EWCA Civ 933: see paragraph 45 below. [Back]