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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Thai Airways International Public Company Ltd v KI Holdings Co Ltd & Anor [2015] EWHC 1250 (Comm) (11 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/1250.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1250 (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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Thai Airways International Public Company Ltd |
Claimant/Part 20 Claimant |
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- and |
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KI Holdings Co Ltd (formerly known as Koito Industries Ltd) Asia Fleet Services (Singapore) PTE Ltd |
Defendant/Part 20 Claimant |
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Hilary Heilbron QC and David Scannell (instructed by Wilmer Hale) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2829 January, 24 February and 1112 February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Section | Para No. |
Introduction | 1 |
Koito's breaches of contract | 2 |
(1) The B777 contract | 3 |
(2) The A330 contract | 5 |
(3) The A380 contract | 8 |
Regulatory breaches | 11 |
Quality breaches | 15 |
Thai's mitigating actions | 16 |
(1) The B777 contract | 17 |
(2) The A330 contract | 18 |
(3) The A380 contract | 20 |
The Jet leases | 22 |
The remaining issues | 26 |
Mitigation: the law | 31 |
The British Westinghouse case | 39 |
Collateral benefits | 46 |
Length of the Jet leases | 51 |
Mitigation costs or loss of profits? | 63 |
(1) Must Thai give credit for "betterment"? | 66 |
(2) The burden of proof | 83 |
(3) Estimate of Thai's net loss of profits | 93 |
Koito's position | 95 |
Thai's position | 100 |
(i) Lost contribution from the A330-300 aircraft | 106 |
The YY document | 107 |
Mr Maher's overview | 111 |
Mr Dearman's overview calculation | 119 |
Mr Dearman's alternative overview calculation | 125 |
Conclusion | 127 |
(ii) Lost contribution from the B777-300 aircraft | 128 |
(iii) Depreciation | 131 |
Conclusion on the Jet lease claim | 138 |
Other costs claimed | 140 |
Replacement seats | 141 |
Savings from the ZIM seats | 145 |
Savings from the Recaro seats | 153 |
Preservation and storage costs | 159 |
Technician expenses | 163 |
Legal costs | 164 |
Compliance costs | 165 |
Credits | 171 |
Price de-escalation | 172 |
Credits received on purchase of new aircraft | 178 |
The sums due | 192 |
Mr Justice Leggatt :
Introduction
Koito's breaches of contract
(1) The B777 contract
(2) The A330 contract
(3) The A380 contract
Regulatory breaches
Quality breaches
Thai's mitigating actions
(1) The B777 contract
(2) The A330 contract
(3) The A380 contract
The Jet leases
"The Meeting Resolved to approve procurement of aircraft by way of short-term operating lease as a result of the delayed delivery of the three A330-300 aircraft and one [B777-300] aircraft due to the inability of the manufacturer to install economy class seats which reduced the number of usable aircraft, causing aircraft rotation problems and therefore, the Company was in need of short-term operating lease of the three aircraft to solve such problems "
The remaining issues
Mitigation: the law
"(1) The first and most important rule is that the claimant must take all reasonable steps to mitigate the loss to him consequent upon the defendant's wrong and cannot recover damages for any such loss which he could thus have avoided but has failed, through unreasonable action or inaction, to avoid. Put shortly, the claimant cannot recover for avoidable loss.
(2) The second rule is the corollary of the first and is that, where the claimant does take reasonable steps to mitigate the loss to him consequent upon the defendant's wrong, he can recover for loss incurred in so doing; this is so even though the resulting damage is in the event greater than it would have been had the mitigating steps not been taken. Put shortly, the claimant can recover for loss incurred in reasonable attempts to avoid loss.
(3) The third rule is that, where the claimant does take steps to mitigate the loss to him consequent upon the defendant's wrong and these steps are successful, the defendant is entitled to the benefit accruing from the claimant's action and is liable only for the loss as lessened; this is so even though the claimant would not have been debarred under the first rule from recovering the whole loss, which would have accrued in the absence of his successful mitigating steps, by reason of these steps not being ones which were required of him under the first rule. ... Put shortly, the claimant cannot recover for avoided loss."
"[the claimant] can recover no more than he would have suffered if he had acted reasonably, because any further damages do not reasonably follow from the defendant's breach."
It is this point on which Andrew Dyson and Adam Kramer focus when they say in an illuminating recent discussion of the subject:
"Mitigation is often said to comprise three rules, but it is better expressed using just one: damages are assessed as if the claimant acted reasonably, if in fact it did not act reasonably."
See A Dyson and A Kramer, "There is No 'Breach Date Rule'" (2014) 130 LQR 259, 263. As Mr Kramer notes in his book on "The Law of Contract Damages" (2014) p.348, fn 47, McGregor's second and third rules are simply the non-application of any rule, i.e. the claimant's actual loss is recoverable where the claimant has acted reasonably.
"If there is more than one reasonable response open to the wronged party, the wrongdoer has no right to determine his choice. It is where, and only where, the wrongdoer can show affirmatively that the other party has acted unreasonably in relation to his duty to mitigate that the defence will succeed."
The British Westinghouse case
"I think the principle which applies here is that which makes it right for the jury or the arbitrator to look at what actually happened, and to balance loss and gain. The transaction was not res inter alios acta, but one in which the person whose contract was broken took a reasonable and prudent course quite naturally arising out of the circumstances in which he was placed by the breach."
"Apart from the breach of contract, the lapse of time had rendered the [British Westinghouse] machines obsolete, and men of business would be doing the only thing they could properly do in replacing them with new and up to date machines."
On the other hand, he also said (at p.688):
"[London Underground] were doubtless not bound to purchase machines of a greater kilowatt power than those originally contracted for, but they in fact took the wise course in the circumstances of doing so, with pecuniary advantage to themselves."
This indicates that London Underground would not have been acting unreasonably if they had replaced the British Westinghouse turbines with new machines of equivalent performance to that which British Westinghouse had warranted that their turbines would achieve.[2]
"provided the course taken to protect himself by the plaintiff in such an action was one which a reasonable and prudent person might in the ordinary conduct of business properly have taken, and in fact did take whether bound to or not, a jury or an arbitrator may properly look at the whole of the facts and ascertain the result in estimating the quantum of damage."
Collateral benefits
"Here, if the profit was an element or consequence of the substitute charter (which itself arose naturally out of the situation in which the charterers were placed by the breach), it was appropriate to speak of the profit itself as arising out of, or as a consequence of, the breach. If on the other hand the profit was not an element or consequence of the substitute charter, then the profit did not arise out of or as a consequence of the breach. It was for the arbitrators to form a judgment one way or the other."
"The causation question is not concluded by the tribunal's finding that the sale was in reasonable mitigation of loss. The loss in question which was mitigated was the owners' net loss of income from the charterparty. The sale of the vessel mitigated this loss because it reduced the continuing costs of operating or laying up the vessel. To the extent that the benefits flowing from the sale comprised such cost savings, there is no difficulty in treating the causal nexus between breach and benefit as established through the mitigating step of selling the vessel. But insofar as the sale gave rise to a capital benefit, it was not caused by the breach, but by the independent decision of the owners to realise the capital value of their asset. Although that was a benefit which flowed from the mitigating step of selling the vessel, it does not satisfy the principle that benefits are only to be taken into account to the extent that they are caused by the breach."
Length of the Jet leases
"In summary, the use of the short-term leased aircraft would reduce the average age of the fleet, stabilise the aircraft availability, increase the product effectiveness, and create better aircraft rotation for appropriate production. Furthermore, it also reduced fuel consumption, CO2 emissions, fuel costs and maintenance costs and enhanced in-flight products while reducing the cost of product improvement of the two B747-400 aircraft."
Mitigation costs or loss of profits?
i) If and insofar as Thai earned any profits as a result of leasing the aircraft from Jet (and other mitigating steps) which it would not have earned if it had not been necessary for Thai to take those steps in response to Koito's breaches of contract, Thai need not as a matter of law give credit for such "betterment".ii) Alternatively, the burden of proof is on Koito to show that leasing the aircraft from Jet generated greater profits than those which Thai would have made if the five A330-300 aircraft and the B777-300 aircraft HS-TKE had been brought into (full) service on time, and Koito has failed to show this.
iii) In the further alternative, there is sufficient evidence to enable the court to conclude that Thai's net loss of profits exceeded the cost of the Jet leases, and Thai is therefore entitled on any view to recover the latter amount.
(1) Must Thai give credit for "betterment"?
"I think they should be allowed the cost of replacement. True it is that they got new for old; but I do not think the wrongdoer can diminish the claim on that account. If they had added extra accommodation or made extra improvements, they would have to give credit. But that is not this case."
The other members of the Court of Appeal agreed. Widgery LJ said (at p.473) that to require credit to be given for betterment would be "the equivalent of forcing the plaintiffs to invest their money in the modernising of their plant which might be highly inconvenient for them".
"It is for the defendant who seeks a deduction from expenditure in mitigation on the ground of betterment to make out his case for doing so. It is not enough that an element of betterment can be identified. It has to be shown that the claimant had a choice, and that he would have been able to mitigate his loss at less cost. ... [I]f the evidence shows that the claimant had a choice, and that the route to mitigation which he chose was more costly than an alternative that was open to him, then a case will have been made out for a deduction. But if it shows that the claimant had no other choice available to him, the betterment must be seen as incidental to the step which he was entitled to take in the mitigation of his loss and there will be no ground for it to be deducted."
Applying these principles, Lord Hope concluded (at para 35) that, because he lacked the money to pay for a hire car, the claimant in that case had no choice but to use the services of the credit hire company to obtain the use of a replacement car, and therefore had no way of avoiding the additional benefits provided by the company. In these circumstances the case for deducting those benefits had not been made out.
"If a man who has taken a third class ticket from London to the north by one of the great companies is by the negligence of that company damaged by their breach of contract to convey him, and he, to reduce the damages, goes to another of the great companies and takes a ticket by the next train on that line, and is thus enabled to reach his destination by the contract time, but cannot travel by that train unless he takes a first class ticket, his damages may well be the whole of the sum he has to pay for that ticket, although the result is that he has enjoyed a greater luxury of travel."
See British Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co Ltd v Underground Electric Railways Co of London Ltd [1912] 3 KB 128, 147. On the facts postulated in this example the only way in which the injured party can reach his destination by the required time is by incurring the cost and obtaining the benefit of a first class ticket.
(2) The burden of proof
"It is often very hard to learn what the value of the performance would have been; and it is a common expedient, and a just one, in such situations to put the peril of the answer upon that party who by his wrong has made the issue relevant to the rights of the other."
In my view, the same expedient must in principle apply where the claimant has reasonably incurred expenditure as a result of the defendant's breach of contract to avoid loss which the breach would otherwise have caused.
"It is for the defendant to prove the value of the advancement. It is he who prays it in aid in mitigation of damage. He must prove, therefore, the value of it."
Fenton-Atkinson LJ (at p.158) agreed with this approach.
(3) Estimates of Thai's net loss of profits
Koito's position
Thai's position
(i) Lost contribution from the A330-300 aircraft
The YY document
Mr Maher's overview
Mr Dearman's overview calculation
Mr Dearman's alternative overview calculation
Conclusion
(ii) Lost contribution from the B777-300 aircraft
(iii) Depreciation
"Depreciation of an asset begins when it is available for use, ie when it is in the location and condition necessary for it to be capable of operating in the manner intended by management."
The five delayed A330-300 aircraft were not available for use until replacement seats were installed.
Conclusion on the Jet lease claim
Other costs claimed
Replacement seats
Savings from the ZIM seats
i) Other than the weight of the seats, the ZIM seats and the Koito seats which they replaced were comparable and any differences were not material;ii) The difference in weight between a shipset of Koito seats and comparable ZIM seats is 779.2kg;
iii) The effect of weight on fuel burn is that the addition of one metric tonne of extra weight carried over 2,500 nautical miles requires an additional 150kgs of fuel;
iv) It is appropriate to assume that the aircraft are used to make two flights of 2,300 nautical miles per day less 10 days of maintenance downtime per year from 1-5 years, 12 days of downtime per year from 6-10 years and 14 days of downtime per year from 11-15 years.
Savings from the Recaro seats
Preservation and storage costs
Technician expenses
Legal costs
Compliance costs
Credits
Price de-escalation
Credits granted on purchase of new aircraft
i) Airbus agreed, "in consideration of the difficulties currently faced by Thai with respect to the non-delivery and installation of the [Koito] seats and the financial burden for the consequent non-operation of [the five A330-300 aircraft which were in storage in Bordeaux]", to grant to Thai upon delivery of each of the seven new aircraft an "operational assistance credit" (Credit B).ii) Airbus agreed, "in consideration of Thai's financial burden and the uncertainty of the termination date of the storage period of the five Stored Aircraft", to "assist Thai to support such burden" by granting to Thai upon delivery of each of the seven new aircraft an "operational assistance subsidy credit" (Credit C).
iii) Airbus agreed, "in recognition of Thai purchasing and taking delivery of the seven [new] aircraft", to grant on delivery of each aircraft a credit to off-set the amount of an invoice which Airbus had issued to Thai claiming "disruption costs" resulting from the delayed delivery of the five A330-300 aircraft to Thai in the sum of US$340,605 (Credit D).
The sums due
Note 1 See also Chitty on Contracts (31st Edn, 2012), Vol I, para 26-077. [Back] Note 2 Although kilowatt power and efficiency are two different measures of the performance of a steam turbine, Viscount Haldane seems to have treated them as interchangeable: see [1912] AC 673, 687 (5500 kilowatts ... was the standard of efficiency under the contract). [Back] Note 3 See Pattni v First Leicester Buses Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 1384, [2012] RTR 17, para 34. [Back] Note 4 This is the sum of the figure of US$19m referred to in paragraph 98 above plus the depreciation charge of US$67m which Mr Maher deducted plus the agreed estimate of US$24m for the B777-300 aircraft. [Back]