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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Micoperi SrL v The Shipowners' Mutual Protection & Indemnity Association (Luxembourg) [2011] EWHC 2686 (Comm) (21 October 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/2686.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2686 (Comm), [2011] ArbLR 51 |
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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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MICOPERI SrL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SHIPOWNERS' MUTUAL PROTECTION & INDEMNITY ASSOCIATION (LUXEMBOURG) |
Defendant |
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ROBERT BRIGHT QC (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 18 October 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BURTON :
i) As found by the Arbitrators, and not challenged on this appeal, the Club unequivocally accepted that Micoperi was covered by the Club (paragraph 44 of the Award) such that the Club would, in accordance with the Club Rules, provide security for Micoperi in respect of Toreador's claim.ii) Toreador agreed to provide security for Micoperi's claim, provided that Micoperi provided security – which it was now able to do.
Security was thus provided in respect of claim and counterclaim, and in due course Toreador issued proceedings against Micoperi in the High Court in London, and Micoperi counterclaimed, with the Club's solicitors acting for them in defending the claim.
"Has the Club waived its right to contend and/or is the Club estopped from (a) denying that the underlying claim, settled by the Club with [Toreador], was covered by the terms of the vessel's entry and (b) claiming repayment or indemnity or restitution or damages in the sum of US$7,106,386 in respect of its payment under the LOU?"
"37. Counsel agreed that there were two main questions for us to decide:
(1) Whether the Club did make an unequivocal representation that it did not intend to enforce its legal rights;
(2) Did Micoperi act in reliance on that representation with the effect that it would be inequitable for the Club to enforce its rights."
There is no doubt that these are the correct legal questions.
"45. We turn to the second limb. In their pleadings, Micoperi relied on two matters:
(1) Micoperi would have taken its own steps to settle Toreador's claim and Micoperi's counterclaim much sooner.
(2) Micoperi would have sought to obtain security from Toreador by arresting pipes which were essential for the operations in the Black Sea. This would have put commercial pressure on Toreador to settle.
In argument Miss Masters raised four additional points:
…
(6) Micoperi became bound to accept a settlement substantially in excess of what it considered to be a reasonable settlement of the claim and which took no account of its counterclaim rights which were compromised by the club in instructing HFW to settle the proceedings.
Mr Bright rightly did not take any objection to these additional points being taken, and we will consider them on their merits."
"46. Points (1) and (2) are closely linked and we will take them together. In mid-July 2006, Mr Bartolotti learned that Toreador had some pipes which had been sent to the Socotherm yard in Italy for cement coating, before being transported to be laid in the Black Sea. The pipes were believed to have considerable financial value. Mr Bartolotti believed that Toreador needed the pipes urgently in the Black Sea and that if Micoperi arrested them in order to secure its claim for payment of outstanding invoices, this would have placed great pressure on Toreador to settle the entire dispute cheaply.
47. Mr Bartolotti raised the point with Mr Dean at the meeting in Ravenna on 11 July 2006. Mr Dean's note included the following:
"Strategy
3. Consider tactic of arresting pipes to secure claim – dependent on Palermo outcome."
In the event, the possible arrest was overtaken by HTD's offer made on 14 July, in return for an LOU, for security for Micoperi's counterclaims to be provided, as was ultimately provided in the form of a bank guarantee.
48. In our view, Mr Bartolotti's strategy depended for its success on Toreador being unwilling or unable to provide security for Micoperi's claims. The reality however, as was demonstrated within 3 days of Mr Bartolotti first raising the idea and on the very day that the Club confirmed cover, was that Toreador was willing and able to provide security. In those circumstances, we do not see how Micoperi could properly have sought to arrest and/or maintain an arrest of the pipes. Even if it had done so, it is clear that security would have been offered and that the arrest would have had to be lifted.
49. In our judgment, therefore, there was no means of putting commercial pressure on Toreador to settle at an early stage. The Club's confirmation of cover did not deny Micoperi the opportunity to settle earlier or to obtain security. More generally, we consider that Mr Bartolotti underestimated the seriousness of Toreador's claim and its determination (with the other Claimants) to press it."
"57. In conclusion, therefore and looking at the overall position, although we have considerable sympathy for its position, we find that Micoperi did not act in reliance on the representation that the claim was covered by the Club. The reality is that as a result of the Club's mistaken confirmation of cover, Micoperi obtained the benefit of the Club's LOU – something it would not have obtained if the Club had declined to confirm cover from the outset. As we see it, the LOU constituted a substantial advantage for Micoperi. Had no LOU been provided, the vessel and quite possibly other assets belonging to Micoperi would have been arrested. This would have been a commercial disaster for Micoperi, as it did not have the means to provide alternative security. The absence of reliance meant that, despite the representation, it would not be inequitable for the Club to enforce its rights."
S69
i) Partial reliance. It is not in any doubt that, for the purposes of the doctrine of equitable estoppel, it is not necessary for a party to show that he has relied entirely on the representation, but only that the representation is one of possibly a number of factors, upon which he relied. This is not expressly recited by the Arbitrators, and an error in that regard may explain their conclusion.ii) Absence of detriment. There is no doubt that it is not part of the concept of equitable estoppel that the party relying on the representation has to show that he acted to his detriment. Such has not been suggested in any of the seminal recitations of the doctrine (see for example Hughes v Metropolitan Railway [1887] 2 App Cas 439 at 448 per Lord Cairns LC or The Kanchenjunga [1991] Lloyd's Rep 391 at 399 per Lord Goff) and it is abjured by Goff J (as he had been ) in The Post Chaser [1981] 2 Lloyd's Rep 695 at 701. Although neither side suggested that detriment was necessary, and the Arbitrators correctly set out what was required to establish the second limb of the estoppel doctrine at paragraph 37(2) (set out above) making no reference to any requirement for detriment, nevertheless, submits Miss Masters, it is apparent from paragraph 57 of the Award, which I have set out above, that the Arbitrators must have fallen into that error. After reciting that Micoperi did not act in reliance, the Arbitrators immediately in the following sentence went on to say that "The reality is that as a result of the Club's mistaken confirmation of cover, Micoperi obtained the benefit of the Club's LoU". The obtaining of benefit is the obverse of the suffering of detriment, and the Arbitrators must have been concluding that detriment was necessary to establish reliance, and that it was absent.
"In some cases an error of law can be demonstrated by studying the way in which the Arbitrator has stated the law in his reasons. It is, however, also possible to infer an error of law in those cases where a correct application of the law to the facts found would lead inevitably to one answer, whereas the Arbitrator has arrived at another: and this can be so even if the Arbitrator has stated the law in his reasons in a manner which appears to be correct – for the Court is then driven to assume that he did not properly understand the principles which he had stated."
i) There is no sign whatever in the Award of either such error. Neither party addressed the Arbitrators otherwise than upon the basis of the common ground, set out in paragraph 37 of the Award, and the experienced Arbitrators are wholly unlikely to have perpetrated such errors of their own accord.ii) The complaint which Miss Masters makes that the Arbitrators cannot possibly have found that there was no reliance by Micoperi has no inter-relationship whatever with any question of partial reliance. The Arbitrators found that there was no reliance at all (twice in paragraph 57).
iii) It is true that the Arbitrators refer, in paragraph 57, to the fact that Micoperi obtained the benefit of the Club's LoU, and to that as being "the reality" of the situation. It is perhaps unfortunate that that was not expressed in the context of the decision which, in the event, the Arbitrators did not find it necessary to come to, namely whether, if they had found reliance, they would have concluded that it was inequitable for the Club to enforce their rights. But the Arbitrators did not conclude that Micoperi did act in reliance, but not to its detriment. They concluded that Micoperi did not act in reliance at all.
"44. In fact, Mr Bartolotti made it clear in his oral evidence that he had not been thinking of settling as such in July 2006. Rather his thoughts were of the possibility of arresting Toreador's pipes in Italy and drawing out the proceedings in Italy related to that for a very long time, so as to put commercial pressure on Toreador to settle … In other words this all hinged on the possibility of arresting Toreador's pipes and keeping them subject to arrest for a lengthy period.
45. The potential legal basis for arresting Toreador's pipes were as security for Micoperi's counterclaim for unpaid invoices, i.e. on the basis that Micoperi was entitled to security from Toreador for that counterclaim. The strategy therefore hinged completely on Toreador not being able to provide, or at least refusing or failing to provide, security … The single factor determining whether it would or would not be possible to arrest Toreador's pipes was whether or not Toreador would offer to provide security – in which case it would not be possible to make the arrest.
46. Toreador did offer security, on 14 July 2006 … The idea of [seeking to arrest the pipes] was abandoned not because of the Club LOU, but because of Toreador's offer of security, as Mr Bartolotti confirmed."
S68
"… we reject the proposition that the settlement was too high. It is clear that it was the best settlement that could be achieved in the circumstances. It was below the 'all in' figure recommended by leading counsel. The Claimants would not have been prepared to settle for less. The counterclaim was not ignored. The only alternative was to take the case to trial. Counsel's advice was pessimistic as to Micoperi's prospects. We consider that the probability was that, if the case was fought, Micoperi would have lost and found itself facing a very large liability in damages, plus a significant costs bill."