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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Glory Wealth Shipping Pte Ltd. v Korea Line Corporation [2011] EWHC 1819 (Comm) (14 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/1819.html Cite as: [2011] 2 Lloyd's Rep 370, [2011] EWHC 1819 (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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GLORY WEALTH SHIPPING PTE LIMITED |
Claimants/Charterers/ Section 69 Applicants |
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- and - |
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KOREA LINE CORPORATION |
Respondents/Owners/ Section 69 Respondents |
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Mr David Lewis (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 22 June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blair :
"What is the correct measure of damages for a charterer's repudiation of a time charter where there is, at the date of the termination of the charter, no market for the unexpired period and such a market only revives at a much later date?"
The arbitrators' Award
"Having decided that the Owners were entitled to advance a claim for both actual and market damages and that there was an available market, albeit fragile, at the relevant time, we awarded the Owners the full amount of their claim for damages for the balance of the charter period … with a deduction for accelerated payment."
Under this head of claim, the arbitrators awarded US$15,698,591.45, and it is only this element of the total award of US$22,823,858.90 which is challenged. I am told that nothing has yet been paid.
The parties' contentions
Discussion
"But as in other cases, there is, I consider, a normal measure of recovery in cases of premature wrongful repudiation of a time charter by the owners, and that normal measure is that, if there is at the time of the termination of the charter-party an available market for the chartering in of a substitute vessel, the damages will generally be assessed on the basis of the difference between the contract rate for the balance of the charter-party period and the market rate for the chartering in of a substitute vessel for that period."
"An injured party such as the owners may not, generally speaking, recover damages against a repudiator such as the charterers for loss which he could reasonably have avoided by taking reasonable commercial steps to mitigate his loss. Thus where, as here, there is an available market for the chartering of vessels, the injured party's loss will be calculated on the assumption that he has, on or within a reasonable time of accepting the repudiation, taken reasonable commercial steps to obtain alternative employment for the vessel for the best consideration reasonably obtainable. This is the ordinary rule whether in fact the injured party acts in that way or, for whatever reason, does not. The actual facts are ordinarily irrelevant. The rationale of the rule is one of simple commercial fairness. The injured party owes no duty to the repudiator, but fairness requires that he should not ordinarily be permitted to rely on his own unreasonable and uncommercial conduct to increase the loss falling on the repudiator."
Finally, the principle is also justified on the grounds of practicality, because the "availability of a substitute market enables a market valuation to be made of what the innocent party has lost, and a line thereby to be drawn under the transaction" (Norden v. Andre, Toulson J, ibid, at [42]).
" … any such principle of damages is in any event only a prima facie rule. If there was no market for an unrepaired vessel, whether the relevant market be the charter market or the sale and purchase market, then it is not possible to apply a prima facie test. … such prima facie rules are only, at bottom, rules of thumb relating to causation and mitigation. The underlying questions remain: what loss has this breach caused as its normal and direct consequence? and what conduct should be presumed to be unreasonable (eg failing to sell shares or a fungible commodity in an available market) in the absence of the displacement of that presumption?"
"[63] The decision in The Elena d'Amico [1980] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 75 was to the effect that the normal measure of recovery in cases of premature termination of a charterparty is the difference between the contractual rate for the balance of the charter period and the market rate. But where there is no market at the time of termination, this measure does not and cannot arise. It is common ground that the spot fixtures entered into by Zodiac at that stage could not be the outcome of an independent decision since no alternative form of mitigation was available.
[64] As explained Zodiac [the owners] submits however that, where a market emerges at some later date on which a term charter covering the residual balance of the period could be fixed, damages for that remaining period should be assessed on the same basis since any alternative employment would constitute independent speculation.
[65] The fact that a term market thereafter emerges for the (yet shorter) outstanding balance of the charter period does not in my judgment import with it the proposition that a decision not to take advantage of that market at that later stage becomes a business decision independent of the wrongful termination. The rationale is that acceptance of the market rate at the date of breach is deemed to constitute reasonable mitigation …
[66] By this mechanism subsequent market movements are removed from the equation. It is simply a matter of chance when the vessel completes any spot voyages after the termination date. Indeed they may overrun the emergence of an available market. In short I see no basis for requiring the owner to go back into the term market at the end of every spot voyage or for that matter to disregard short time charters in case the market for longer charters emerges in the meantime."
Conclusions
"The basic rule in the case of repudiation of a charterparty, where there is an available market, is that the loss is measured as at the date of acceptance of the repudiation. The calculation is made on the basis that the injured party can mitigate his loss by going into the market and obtaining a replacement charter as soon as reasonably possible on the best terms available for the balance of the charter period: see Koch Marine Inc v D'Amica Societa di Navigazione Arl (The Elena D'Amico) [1980] 1 Lloyd's Rep 75 per Robert Goff J. His loss will then be calculated by reference to the extent to which he is worse off in consequence. This will normally be the extra cost of chartering a substitute vessel, if the owner has repudiated the original charter, and any reduction in charter rates if the repudiation was by the charterer. In either case the loss is ordinarily assessed over the remainder of the duration of the original charter".