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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Taokas Navigation SA v Komrowski Bulk Shipping KG (GmbH & Co) & Ors [2012] EWHC 1888 (Comm) (11 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/1888.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1888 (Comm), [2013] 1 CLC 29, [2012] 2 Lloyd's Rep 416, [2013] 1 All ER (Comm) 564 |
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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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TAOKAS NAVIGATION SA |
Owners |
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- and - |
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KOMROWSKI BULK SHIPPING KG (GmbH & Co) and KENT LINE INTERNATIONAL LTD. -and- SOLYM CARRIERS LTD |
Charterers Sub-Charterers Sub-Sub-Charterers |
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Charlotte Tan (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan LLP) for the Sub-Charterers, Kent Line International Ltd
Christopher Wood (of Winter Scott LLP) appearing for the Charterers, Komrowski Bulk Shipping KG (GmbH & Co)
Robert Bright QC (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Owners, Taokas Navigation SA.
Hearing dates: 31 May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
Clause 5 Trading Limits
The Vessel shall be employed in such lawful trades between safe ports and safe places within (See Clause 50).
Clause 50 Trading limits / exclusions
Vessel always to trade within I.W.L., Charterers' option breach of LW.L. subject to Owners' underwriters approval and invoice (Owners will assist to obtain the rate lower or approximate to London scale. it is however WOG), always afloat at any time of tide, Charterers' option NAABSA, always via safe port(s)/berth(s)/anchorage(s) excluding:
Abkhazia, Angola, Cambodia, C.I.S. Far Eastern ports, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Georgia but the port of Poti is allowed, Great Lakes, Haiti, Lebanon, but Iraq will be allowed as soon as situation normalizes, Israel, Liberia, North Korea, Serbia, Somalia, Syria is allowed provided vessel is not flying Liberian flag, Yemen, Zaire, places subject to U.N. sanctions, areas prohibited by vessel's war risks underwriters due to war-like activities, and places which may be excluded by the authority of the vessel's flag. Passing Gulf of Aden always allowed with H&M insurance authorization.
Cuba is included in the trading of the vessel but to be redelivered to the Owners free of any U.S.A. ban.
No direct trade between People's Republic of China and Taiwan.
Clause 94 – BIMCO War Risks Clause for TimeCharters 2004
Code Name: CONWARTIME 2004
(a) For the purpose of this Clause, the words:
(i) "Owners" shall include the Shipowners, Bareboat Charterers, Disponent Owners, managers or other operators who are charged with the management of the Vessel, and the Master; and
(ii) "War Risks" shall include any actual, threatened or reported: war; act of war; civil war; hostilities; revolution; rebellion; civil commotion; warlike operations; laying of mines; acts of piracy; acts of terrorists; acts of hostility or malicious damage; blockades (whether imposed against all vessels or imposed selectively against vessels of certain flags or ownership, or against certain cargoes or crews or otherwise howsoever); by any person; body; terrorist or political group, or the Government of any state whatsoever, which, in the reasonable judgement of the Master and/or the Owners, may be dangerous or are likely to be or to become dangerous to the Vessel, her cargo, crew or other persons on board the Vessel.
(b) The Vessel, unless the written Consent of the Owners be first obtained, shall not be ordered to or required to continue to or through, any port, place, area or zone (whether of land or sea), or any waterway or canal, where it appears that the Vessel, her cargo, crew or other persons on board the Vessel, in the reasonable judgement of the Master and/or the Owners, may be, or are likely to be, exposed to War Risks. Should the Vessel be within any such place as aforesaid, which only becomes dangerous, or is likely to be or become dangerous, after her entry into it, she shall be at liberty to leave it.
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(d) (i) The Owners may affect war risks insurance in respect of the Hull and Machinery of the Vessel and their other interests (including but not limited to, loss of earnings and detention, the crew and their protection and Indemnity Risks), and the premiums and/or cans therefore shall be for their account.
(ii) If the Underwriters of such insurance should require payment of premiums and/or call because, pursuant to the Charterers' orders, the Vessel is within, or is due to enter and remain within, or pass through any area or areas which are specified by such Underwriters as being subject to additional premiums because of War Risks, then the actual premiums and/or calls paid shall be reimbursed by the Charterers to the Owners at the same time as the next payment of hire is due, or upon redelivery, whichever occurs first.
(e) If the Owners become liable under the terms of employment to pay to the crew any bonus or additional wages in respect of sailing into an area which is dangerous in the manner defined by the said terms, then the actual bonus or additional wages paid shall be reimbursed to the Owners by the Charterers at the same time as the next payment of hire is due, or upon redelivery, whichever occurs first.
(f) If in accordance with their rights under the foregoing provisions of this Clause, the Owners shall refuse, to proceed to the loading or discharging ports, or anyone or more of them, they shall immediately inform the Charterers. No cargo shall be discharged at any alternative port without first giving the Charterers notice of the Owners intention to do so and requesting them to nominate a safe port for such discharge. Failing such nomination by the Charterers within 48 hours of the receipt of such notice and request, the owners may discharge the cargo at any safe port of their own choice,
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(h) If in compliance with any of the provisions of sub-clauses (b) to (g) of this Clause anything is done or not done, such shall not be deemed a deviation, but shall be considered as due fulfilment of this Charter Party.
"Whether, on the true construction of the Charterparty of the PAIWAN WISDOM between the Claimant (as charterers) and the Defendant (as disponent owners) dated 25 March 2010, the Defendant is precluded from relying upon on the CONWARTIME 2004 clause to justify its refusal to proceed on a voyage to Mombasa ordered by the Claimant on 23 April 2010 in the event that there was no material change in the risk (otherwise encompassed within the words of the CONWARTIME 2004 clause) of proceeding with that voyage between the date of the Charterparty and the date of the order?"
i) There was no suggestion that the Owners were aware, when entering the charterparty, that the vessel was likely to be employed on one or more voyages to Kenya; paragraphs 56-57 of the Award.ii) When the charterparty was concluded the shipping community was aware of the threat of piracy in some parts, at least, of the Indian Ocean; paragraph 61 of the Award.
iii) The risks inherent in passing through the Gulf of Aden were ameliorated by the presence of naval forces and the convoy system; paragraph 61 of the Award.
i) that the Owners' liberty to determine that there was a real likelihood that the vessel would be exposed to acts of piracy (in the sense that the approach to Kenya would be dangerous on account of acts of piracy)[1] was exercised in good faith; andii) that there had been no change in the likelihood that the vessel would be exposed to acts of piracy on the approach to Kenya between the date of the charterparty (25 March 2010) and the date of the voyage instructions (23 April 2010).
i) A war risks clause must be read in the light of the charterparty as a whole and in its factual matrix.ii) Even though war risks clauses are not, strictly speaking, exceptions clauses the burden is on the Owners to show that they are entitled to invoke them.
iii) Where the Owners have, by the terms of the charterparty construed in its factual context, accepted a particular War Risk involved in trading to a port or area, the liberty to refuse to trade to such port or area is not available unless the Owners can establish that there has been an increase, or escalation, in the relevant War Risk since the date of the charter.
"What risks or costs the owners have agreed to bear may depend on the construction of other relevant provisions of the contract, or on an informed judgment of the broad range of physical and commercial hazards which are normally incidental to the chartered service, or on some combination of the two." (per Lord Sumption in ENE Kos 1 v Petroleo Brasileiro SA [2012] 2 WLR 976 at paragraph 11.)
"Although at the time when the charter-party was made the whole of the Gulf, including UAE waters, constituted a war risk zone, the owners were, by the combination of cll. 10 [the trading limits clause], 40(2) [the war risk clause] and 50 [the war risk premium clause] accepting that in the circumstances prevailing at the date of the charter-party the risks of proceeding to UAE ports and loading there were not such as they would consider "dangerous" so as to render the discretion under cl.40(2) exercisable."
Note 1 See Triton Lark [2012] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 151 and 457 [Back]