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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Choil Trading SA v Sahara Energy Resources Ltd [2010] EWHC 374 (Comm) (26 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/374.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 374 (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 :
____________________
CHOIL TRADING SA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SAHARA ENERGY RESOURCES LTD |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Mark Smith (instructed by Spenser Underhill Newmark) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 10th December 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
The contracts
PPMC and Sahara
Sahara and Choil
"Cyril secchi: j'ai une toute petite question pour toi: sur ce naphtha, c'est as is?
Eli Driay: yep
Cyril secchi: ok cool merci".
Wednesday 18th July
"Following our conversation, please look at following and confirm your agreement.
We expect name of your ship asap to fully confirm the deal. Shall you have two in mind please mention to us, so we could clear them both.
Quantity: 30,000 mt +/-[2] 5% buyers option but always subject to terminal/operational final agreement.
Quality: PHRC naphtha quality. You have received the specs taken from the tank which is what is being made available to us.
Laycan: 25-26th July 2007
Inspection: 50/50, we recommend Q + Q, which is of great help there.
Price
High cif quotation for naphtha CIF cargoes NEW[3] for five consecutively published quotations around bill of lading (2/1/1, 3/0/2) minus 40,00 usd/mt (forty dollars per metric ton)
Payment
Against letter of credit to be opened ASAP, please indicate which bank you are willing to use to facilitate the process.
Payment: 20 days after bill of lading date
Port dues Borne by buyers"
Thursday 19th July
"Laytime 36 + 6"
"Just to confirm the deal as below, and we will send u the full contract back to u this afternoon once our ops have written it! The l/c is being worked on by the finance dept and bank and we expect this to be sent to you this afternoon too".
What was below was Ms Driay's e-mail of 18th July.
Friday 20th July
The 20th July terms
"We are pleased to confirm the following transaction concluded on July 18th 2007 as per terms and conditions here below:
1. Seller
Sahara Energy Resource Ltd …
2. Buyer
Choil Trading SA
3. Product
Naphtha
Quality
4. Naphtha of normal running production as produced by Port Harcourt Refining Company with following actual specifications as determined at loadport on the basis of samples drawn from shore tanks
……
Saybolt Colour ASTM D 156 + 23.9
5. Quantity
30,000 metric tones +/- 5 PCT in Buyer's option
6. Price
In USD/MT, FOB one safe port/one safe berth Port Harcourt, on B/L weight, calculated as follows:
Average of High Quotations as published by Platts European Marketscan for the five consecutive publication dates around the b/l date under the heading 'CIF NWE/Basis ARA[4]" for Naphtha minus a differential of USD 40.00…
7. Delivery
In one lot as full or part cargo, fob one safe port/one safe berth Port Harcourt, by M/T "TBC"/SUB to be acceptable to seller, such acceptance not to be unreasonably withheld, consistent with Laycan 25-26 July 1007, both dates inclusive.
8. Payment
Payment shall be effected without set off, withhold, deduction or counter-claim, with latest value twenty (20) calendar days after B/L date (B/L date to count as day zero) against presentation of seller's invoice and full set of 3/3 original bill(s) of lading, duly issued or endorsed to the order of buyer or buyer's designee, and other usual shipping documents or in the absence of the original shipping documents, seller's invoice and letter of indemnity in a wording and countersigned by a first class bank both acceptable to buyer (telex/fax invoice and letter of indemnity acceptable).
9. Laytime
Laytime allowed to seller for delivery hereunder shall be 36 hours SHINC, pro rate for part cargo.
Laytime shall commence either 6 hours after NOR tendered at Loadport or upon berthing, whichever is earlier and expire at hoses disconnection, provided however that vessel is not detained for seller's or loading terminal own purposes in excess of two hours following hoses disconnection, otherwise time will cease when vessel is fully released by seller/loading terminal
Laytime shall otherwise be calculated as per charter party terms and conditions
10. Demurrage
Demurrage shall be at charterparty rate as per charterparty terms and conditions
11. West African Clauses
War risk premiums if any to be for sellers acc.
Port costs in West Africa exceeding USD 15,000 shall be for sellers account.
Any taxes and or dues on cargo and or freight including but not limited to Nigerian conservancy due, handling charges and levy to be for sellers account.
If any vetting arrangement is or should become necessary to call Nigeria, sellers to arrange for same at their time and expenses.
Any time awaiting naval clearance to be for sellers account.
If the vsl is delayed (other than caused by buyer or vessel), sellers to pay demurrage rate pd/pr for the duration of the waiting time.
Buyers will invoice sellers and sellers to pay demurrage every 5 days against buyers invoices.
Any delays in obtaining Nigerian task force permission to enter Nigerian waters to count in full as used laytime or demurrage if on demurrage.
NMA fee if imposed shall be for sellers account. The sellers are responsible for the NMA approvals.
12. Determination of quantity and quality
A mutually acceptable independent inspector shall be appointed to monitor and verify the quality and quantity of product loaded. The costs of the independent inspector shall be borne equally between the parties.
The quality and quantity of the product delivered shall be determined by measurement, sampling and testing in the manner customary at the loading terminal which shall be in accordance with recognised methods and practices for such determinations. The results of such measurement, sampling and, except in the case of fraud or manifest error, the certificate issued by the independent inspector shall be treated as final and binding as to the quantity and quality of the product loaded.
Any complaint with regard to the quantity or quality of product supplied under the agreement must be notified in writing to the seller within 30 days of completion of loading and must be accompanied by documentary evidence supporting the complaint.
13. Other terms
Incoterms 2000 for fob deliveries including latest amendments if any, shall be applied when not in conflict with the present agreement.
The United Nations convention on contracts for the international sale of goods shall not apply to this contract.
Neither seller nor buyer shall be responsible for any failure to fulfil their respective obligations under the agreement (other than the payment of money) if fulfilment has been delayed, hindered, interfered with, curtailed or prevented, by any circumstance whatsoever which is not within the control of seller or of buyer as the case may be.
Neither party shall be liable for any consequential, indirect or special losses or special damages of any kind arising out of or in any way connected with the performance of or failure to perform the agreement.
Neither the seller nor the buyer shall in no circumstances be liable for; -more than the difference between the contract price and the market price; -any loss of profit; -cost of overheads thrown away; or –loss resulting from shut-down of seller's plant.
This contract shall be governed and construed in accordance with the laws of England to the exclusion of any other legal system.
The parties hereto irrevocably agree that the High Court of England (London Commercial Court and London Business Court) are to have exclusive jurisdiction in respect of any and all disputes which may arise out of or in connection with this contract and/or its performance or non performance and agree to submit to the sole jurisdiction of these courts.
14. ……….
15. Entire Agreement
This contract and any of its subsequent amendments contains the entire agreement of both parties and it cannot be modified unless in writing.
16. ………..
We are pleased to have concluded this business transaction with you and look forward to your written confirmation that the foregoing accurately reflects our mutual understanding".
"Please note that we will comment on it on Monday, particularly on clause 11, where port costs were clearly discussed to be for buyers account, since it is charterers responsibility, as well as war risk premium.
As nicely expressed bwteen [sic] myself and simon …"
Ms Driay then set out in the e-mail various text messages between her and Simon MacKenzie on 17 July in the course of which she had asked him whether he had taken into account the port charges and extra war risk insurance in Nigeria.
Monday 23rd July
"j'aurai besoin de resultats supplememtaires sur ce naphtha
Voici la liste de ce dont j'ai besoin (evidemment, ne fait pas attention aux resultats)
"MTBE mg/kg BY GC max 50"
Tuesday 24th July
"Your vessel is acceptable to load".
"Quantity
Should read 30,000 metric tons +/- 5% in buyers option subject to final terminal acceptance.
Laytime
Laytime allowed to seller for delivery shall be 42 hours shinc and shall commence 6 hours after nor if tendered within agreed delivery range and nor to be tendered between 0600hrs and 1600hrs.
Section of this clause not clear and requires clarification
"Provided however that vessel is not detained for seller's or loading terminal own purposes in excess of two hours following hoses disconnection, otherwise time will cease when vessel is fully released by seller/loading terminal." What time please specify.
Demurrage
Demurrage shall be time barred after forty five days.
West Africa Clause
We do not accept this wording.
Quantity nomination
(i) that SGS would report quality results as tested by the cargo suppliers and would draw samples from the nominated tanks for loading, but due to a breakdown at the SGS laboratory of the gas chromatography equipment, the analysis would be limited to six specific parameters;
(ii) that the ship's cargo tanks would be sampled and the composite samples placed on board for cargo receivers and part of the composite would be analysed based on those parameters and others would be retained in the SGS laboratory for the required period;
(ii) that, if a full analysis was needed, samples would be sent by flight to an SGS laboratory in Rotterdam;
(iv) that there was a possibility of contamination because the pipeline from the jetty to PHRC's storage facilities was used both for the loading of naphtha and the receipt of unleaded gasoline as a result of which the naphtha was sometimes contaminated;
(v) that due to draft restriction of 9.20M maximum the loaded quantity might be between 26,500 and 28,000 m/tons.
Wednesday 25th July
Choil's sale to Petrogal
"Naphtha as usually exported ex Port Harcourt, Nigeria with the following guarantee
There were then set out various characteristics including
Mtbe mg/kg 50 ppm max
Delivery
In seller's nominated vessel (M/T Prem Mala already accepted by buyer) in one lot as full or part cargo CFR one safe port, one safe and always accessible berth, Basis Leixoes, Portugal consistent with scheduled loading during the period 25th July – 28th July, 2007 (both dates included) at Port Harcourt, Nigeria.
Date of vessel's bill(s) of lading to count as delivery date.
Seller to allow buyer charterparty options for discharge at other port(s) with freight differential, if any, at charterparty rate, terms and conditions to be for buyer's account.
Nomination
Seller to nominate vessel latest 24 hours before first day of delivery date.
Price
In US dollars per metric tonne CFR Basis Leixoes, Portugal, on bill of lading quantity shall be calculated as follows:
Price to be the average of the mean Platt's European Marketscan Quotations for Naphtha under the heading 'Cargoes CIF NWE/Basis ARA'/ As valid for the effective and consecutive Platts European Marketscan Quotations published during the period 6th-10th August, 2007 (both dates inclusive) plus a premium of US dollars 17.00 (US dollars seventeen and zero US cents) per metric tonne.
Final price to be rounded to three decimal places.
Mean Platts CIF NWE/Basis ARA for 6th – 10th + $ 17"
Thursday 26th July
"If I understand what your mail is saying we have a quality issue here; from the stock report it is clear that the volume of the nominated tank would not be enough to load our cargo; the balance would have to be pumped from the intermediate shore tank in to the nominated tank. Are we looking at a quality issue on the large scale and not just in litres?
Please treat the matter with absolute urgency because the vessel is to arrive pm today".
SGS replied that they were monitoring the situation and would ensure that the samples were drawn as soon as the tanks were ready. They also reported that the berth was presently occupied by a vessel that was discharging Petroleum Motor Spirit ("PMS") which might not complete until Monday 30th July.
Notice of Readiness
Friday 27th July
Monday 30th July
"On top of the most important information being that there is no electricity, I am a bit concerned by the quality of the naphtha as far as the colour is concerned. All data we have seen were clearly showing saybolt above 20 value, which means it is clear and bright condensate.
Having value below 20, means that it is dirty condensate, which makes the destination, price etc, totally different as it has go back through refining process,
Could you please enquire about this.
The cargo has been sold AS IS, to our buyers, whom we need to inform."
Tuesday 31 July
"In that case of extreme tension when our buyers are calling almost every hour… I would have appreciated a bit more communication from your side.
Send me news !?!?
What if the buyers quire rightfully rejects the cargo as not being naphtha at all and ask for heavy discount?!?!
What if master refuses to load a dark product?
Counting on you claiming all demurrage to ppmc, since our laycan was definitely confirmed as 25-26th.
Our buyers also need to give information to the final receiver who happens to be a good client of ours of the crude oil side.. petrogal!
And our buyers are the sellers of jet to cover ppmc DPK short, so we'd better keep them happy on one side to have the other side as smooth as it could be.
I imagine you are doing what shall be done, but please communicate.
Have not seen a single email from you on the topic."
Wednesday 1st August
Prem Mala berths
Thursday 2 August
Friday 3rd August
"In the event the property would not meet the above list of specifications parties have agreed that the contract can then be re-negotiated or cancelled".
Saturday 4th August
Sunday 5th August
Monday 6th August
Loading begins
Wednesday 8th August
Completion of loading of first parcel
Thursday 9th August
Friday 10th August
Saturday 11th August
Sunday 12th August
Monday 13th August
Tuesday 14th August
Wednesday 15th August
First parcel[5] 15,600 m³ 11,708 tonnes
Second parcel 23,129 m³ 17,058 tonnes
Thursday 16th August
The quality of the naphtha
Friday 17th August
Colour MTBE
Tank 03 B + 17 1220
Tank 04 A + 17 27
Tank 57 A + 17 1890
Saturday 18th August
The Bill of Lading
Tuesday 21st August
Wednesday 22nd August
Thursday 27th August
Friday 28th August – rejection
Saturday 29th August
Sample Colour MTBE
Slop port + 18 2200
Composite ship's + 19 1000
tanks 1C, 2C, 5C
& 6C first parcel
Composite ship's + 14 2100
tanks 3W,4W,7W
& 8W second
parcel
Sunday 30th August
Sample Colour MTBE
52tk57A (parcel 1) + 16 2300
52k57A (parcel 2) + 22 650
Monday 31st August
Wednesday 2nd September
Monday 7th September
Friday 11th September
Saturday 12th September
The mitigation sale
13th – 15th September
The cause and effect of the contamination
The prices of the relevant sales.
(a) Sale from Sahara to Choil $ 16,986,772.53;
= $ 600.45 per mt.
(b) Sale from Choil to Petrogal $ 18,838,357.71
if it had gone ahead
(Platts mean of $ 648.90 + $ 17 = $ 665.90 per mt x 28,290.07).
(c) Sale from Choil to Blue Ocean $ 20,225,579.27
= $ 714.93 per mt.
The claim
The contractual terms as to quality.
Choil's case
"Quality
Naphtha of normal running production as produced by Port Harcourt Refining Company with following actual specifications as determined at loadport on the basis of samples drawn from shore tanks
together with the other terms of the specification contained therein; and (ii) the statutorily implied terms as to correspondence with description; satisfactory quality and fitness for purpose.
Sahara's case
Discussion and conclusion on quality term
Quantum
"(2) The measure of damages for breach of warranty is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting, in the ordinary course of events, from the breach of warranty.
(3) In the case of breach of a warranty of quality such loss is prima facie the difference between the value of the goods at the time of delivery to the buyer and the value they would have had if they had answered the warranty"..
Choil's submissions
Sahara's submissions
Discussion
"liability to the ultimate user that is contemplated as the measure of damage and if in fact [the bitumen] is used without injurious results so that no such liability arises, the [original buyer] could not claim the difference in market value and say that the sub-sale must be disregarded".
In Bence Graphics the majority of the Court of Appeal overruled the judge's award based on section 53 (3) and held that the damages should be measured only by reference to any liability that the claimant might have incurred to third parties.
"If the variation to a description is such that it is impossible to say whether the injury that ultimately results would have flowed from the breach of the original warranty , the parties must as reasonable men be presumed to have put the liability for the injury outside their contemplation as a measure of compensation. If this is, as I believe the nature of the principle, it must be applied very differently according to whether the injury for which the defendant is being asked to pay is a market loss or a physical damage. In the former case …any variation that is more than a matter of words is likely to be fatal, because there is no way of telling its effect on the market value. In the latter case the nature of the physical damage will show whether the variation was material or not".
"It is perfectly true that the defendants knew that the plaintiffs were merchants who had bought for re-sale, but everybody who sells to a merchant knows that he has bought for re-sale, and it does not, as I understand it, make any difference to the ordinary measure of damages where there is a market. What is contemplated is that the merchant buys for re-sale, but if the goods are not delivered to him he will go out into the market and buy similar goods and honour his contract in that way. If the market has fallen he has suffered no damage; if the market has risen the measure of damages is the difference in the market price. If, for example, a man sells goods of special manufacture and it is known that they are to be re-sold, it must also be known that they cannot be bought in the market, being specially manufactured by the seller. In such a case the loss of profit becomes the appropriate measure of damage. Similarly, it may very well be that in the case of string contracts, if the seller knows that the merchant is not buying merely for re-sale generally, but upon a string contract where he will re-sell those specific goods and where he could only honour his contract by delivering those goods and not others, the measure of loss of profit on re-sale is the right measure."
Slater v Hoyle & Smith [1920] 2 KB 11,20; Wertheim v Chicoutini Pulping Co [1911] AC 301,489; Bence Graphics v Fasson Ltd; Louis Dreyfus Trading Ltd v Reliance Trading Ltd [2004] EWHC 525, where the parties had in contemplation that the very sugar that was agreed to be sold would be sold pursuant to a particular sub-sale[7].
Choil's loss
Timing
Measurement
Choil's submissions
Additional freight involved in $ 204,930[8]
discharging in Amsterdam, not
Leixoes
Deviation costs because of the need $ 281,398.90
to wait off Leixoes
Additional survey costs $ 9,831.46
Insurance costs $ 9,000
$ 505,160.36
Thus the total claim under this head is $ 1,877,228.76
(a) whether the sale price to Petrogal is a satisfactory indicator of the sound arrived value of the cargo around 28th August;
(b) whether the sale to Blue Ocean was a satisfactory indicator of the actual value of the cargo at the same time; and
(c) whether the difference between + 17 and - $ 31.50 is properly to be regarded as representing the difference between sound and arrived value.
Sahara's submissions on Choil's methodology
(a) The price under the Petrogal contract does not represent the
value which the naphtha would have had if it had complied with the Sahara-Choil contract. The Petrogal contract was a contract in which Choil gave several warranties as to quality in terms of paraffins, olefins, naphthenes, aromatics, MTBE and other characteristics[9]. Sahara never gave such warranties. The Petrogal contract was based on loading at Port Harcourt in the period 25th – 28th July, whereas the naphtha was loaded on 13th August ; and it was highly speculative in that it provided a free right to cancel;
(b) The price premium which can be obtained for naphtha which is
to be blended into gasoline is seasonal. The driving season ends with the end of summer when the price premium closes. A better price would have been obtainable for the naphtha when it was delivered on 13th August (the date of completion of loading). Over the following month the price premium for naphtha which was to be blended into gasoline closed;
(c) The naphtha became a distressed cargo because the vessel
arrived in Europe without a buyer and not because it had MTBE in it. As a result Choil was at the mercy of other traders who drove a hard bargain. The naphtha was not distressed on 13th August 2007. When on 16th August SGS produced an analysis showing MTBE at 1220, 03, and 1890 mg/kg in the shore tanks the naphtha could have been sold to a blender at the same price as it would have been sold at if it had not had MTBE';
(d) The naphtha market was in backwardation in September 2007
i.e. the price for immediate delivery was higher than the price for future delivery. This suggests that Choil had failed to obtain the best price for the naphtha.
The sound value on 28th August
The value of the cargo as delivered
Hedging
"Neither party shall be liable for any consequential, indirect or special losses or special damages of any kind arising out of or in any way connected with the performance of or failure to perform the agreement.
Neither the seller nor the buyer shall in no circumstances be liable for; -more than the difference between the contract price and the market price; -any loss of profit; -cost of overheads thrown away; or –loss resulting from shut-down of seller's plant.
Demurrage
When did laytime start?
(i) Sahara's receipt and acceptance of Choil's letter of credit at 1726 on 20th July: see para 13 above;
(ii) Sahara pressing Choil during 23rd July to nominate the carrying vessel: see para 14 above;
(iii) Choil nominating the Prem Mala under the contract;
(iv) Sahara's nomination of the Prem Mala to PPMC;
(v) Sahara at 1038 Geneva time on Tuesday 24th July accepting the Prem Mala.
Thus, so it is said, Sahara's proposed amendments sent at 1119 Geneva time on Tuesday 24th were too late.
"Laytime shall otherwise be calculated as per Charter Party Terms and Conditions".
The charterparty was on the standard ASBATANKVOY form which provides for a total laytime for load and discharge ports of 84 hours and for laytime to commence 6 hours after NOR. The latter provision therefore governs the commencement of laytime and the laytime is 42 hours (1/2 of 84).
0048 on 13th August to 1630 on 17th August
1630 on 17th August to 1430 on 18th August
1430 on 18th August to 1545 on 21st August
Short delivery
Market price $ 659
Freight ($ 24.31)
Contract price ($ 600.45 )
$ 34.24
x 1,109.93 = $ 38,004
"Any complaint with regard to the quantity or quality of product supplied under the agreement must be notified in writing to the seller within 30 days of completion of loading and must be accompanied by documentary evidence supporting the complaint".
Conclusion
A Due from Choil to Sahara
1. Balance of purchase price under $ 1,200,000
Naphtha contract
--------------
B Due from Sahara to Choil
1 Demurrage under jet contract $ 61,833.33
2 Damages for breach of the naphtha
contract $ 1,208,157.30
3 Demurrage under the naphtha $ 281,885.40
contract
4 Damages for short delivery $ 38,004
under the naphtha contract
$ 1,589,880.03
Balance due to Choil from Sahara $ 389,880.03
Note 1 Port Harcourt Refining Company [Back] Note 2 The “-“ is in fact omitted – an obvious mistake. [Back] Note 3 NEW was what is mistakenly typed. North West Europe (“NWE”) was plainly intended. [Back] Note 4 Amsterdam/Rotterdam/Antwerp. [Back] Note 5 Including the slops. [Back] Note 6 These results were in the report for both dates. The results for 30th August covered a number of specifications not covered by the 29th August report. [Back] Note 7 Although the court held that that might not necessarily have displaced the prima facie measure of damages. [Back] Note 8 This calculation uses the $ 10.57 Worldscale figure at A 16 (a). [Back] Note 9 The naphtha as supplied in fact complied with the specification in the Petrogal contract as to everything save MTBE and colour. But that did not affect the contractual terms.
[Back] Note 10 Mrs Annesley’s Table 3 and, in particular, column 7 was difficult to follow without the explanation which she gave me in oral evidence. [Back] Note 11 Even if a trader has a sale for its purchase it will normally hedge if the two contracts have different pricing periods. That is what Choil would do. [Back] Note 12 It could not have been September Brent because in the middle of the month the following month’s futures expire. [Back]