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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> BV Scheepswerf Damen Gorinchem v The Marine Institute [2015] EWHC 1810 (Comm) (24 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/1810.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1810 (Comm), [2015] 2 Lloyd's Rep 351 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
B.V. SCHEEPSWERF DAMEN GORINCHEM |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE MARINE INSTITUTE |
Defendant |
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Mr Timothy Hill QC (instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: Thursday 4 June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Flaux :
Introduction and background
(1) Pursuant to section 68(2)(a) and/or (c) the delay in publishing the Award (of some 376 days after a three day hearing) was a failure by the arbitrator to comply with his general duties under section 33 of the Act and/or a failure to comply with the procedure agreed between the parties, clause 20 of the LMAA terms;(2) Pursuant to section 68(2)(a) and/or (d) the arbitrator failed to deal with all of the issues put to him and/or failed to consider central issues and/or failed to take proper consideration of key evidence.
Legal principles applicable to section 68 applications
"Challenging the award: serious irregularity.
(1)A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award.
A party may lose the right to object (see section 73) and the right to apply is subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(2)Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant—
(a) failure by the tribunal to comply with section 33 (general duty of tribunal);
(b) the tribunal exceeding its powers (otherwise than by exceeding its substantive jurisdiction: see section 67);
(c) failure by the tribunal to conduct the proceedings in accordance with the procedure agreed by the parties;
(d) failure by the tribunal to deal with all the issues that were put to it;
(e) any arbitral or other institution or person vested by the parties with powers in relation to the proceedings or the award exceeding its powers;
(f) uncertainty or ambiguity as to the effect of the award;
(g) the award being obtained by fraud or the award or the way in which it was procured being contrary to public policy;
(h) failure to comply with the requirements as to the form of the award; or
(i) any irregularity in the conduct of the proceedings or in the award which is admitted by the tribunal or by any arbitral or other institution or person vested by the parties with powers in relation to the proceedings or the award.
(3) If there is shown to be serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award, the court may—
(a) remit the award to the tribunal, in whole or in part, for reconsideration,
(b) set the award aside in whole or in part, or
(c) declare the award to be of no effect, in whole or in part."
"(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties, to the arbitrator concerned and to any other arbitrator) apply to the court to remove an arbitrator on any of the following grounds—
…
(d) that he has refused or failed—
(i) properly to conduct the proceedings, or
(ii) to use all reasonable despatch in conducting the proceedings or making an award,
and that substantial injustice has been or will be caused to the applicant."
"(a) Section 68 reflects "the internationally accepted view that the Court should be able to correct serious failures to comply with the 'due process' of arbitral proceedings: cf art 34 of the Model Law" (see Lesotho Highlands Development Authority v Impregilo SpA [2005] UKHL 43, Paragraph 27); relief under Section 68 will be appropriate only where the tribunal has gone so wrong in the conduct of the arbitration that "justice calls out for it to be corrected." (ibid).
(b) The test will not be applied by reference to what would have happened if the matter had been litigated (see ABB v Hochtief Airport [2006] 2 Lloyd's Rep 1, paragraph 18).
(c) The serious irregularity requirement sets a "high threshold" and the requirement that the serious irregularity has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant is designed to eliminate technical and unmeritorious challenges (Lesotho, paragraph 28).
(d) The focus of the enquiry under Section 68 is due process and not the correctness of the Tribunal's decision (Sonatrach v Statoil Natural Gas [2014] 2 Lloyd's Rep 252 paragraph 11).
(e) Section 68 should not be used to circumvent the prohibition or limitations on appeals on law or of appeals on points of fact (see, for example, Magdalena Oldendorff [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 7, Paragraph 38, and Sonatrach Paragraph 45).
(f) Whilst arbitrators should deal at least concisely with all essential issues (Ascot Commodities NV v Olam International Ltd [2002] CLC 277 Toulson J at 284D), courts should strive to uphold arbitration awards (Zermalt Holdings SA v and Nu Life Upholstery Repairs Ltd [1985] 2 EGLR 14 at page 15, Bingham J quoted with approval in 2005 in the Fidelity case [2005] 2 Lloyds Rep 508 paragraph 2) and should not approach awards "with a meticulous legal eye endeavouring to pick holes, inconsistencies and faults on awards with the objective of upsetting or frustrating the process of arbitration".
(g) As to Section 68(2)(d):
(i) There must be a "failure by the tribunal to deal" with all of the "issues" that were "put" to it.
(ii) There is a distinction to be drawn between "issues" on the one hand and "arguments", "points", "lines of reasoning" or "steps" in an argument, although it can be difficult to decide quite where the line demarking issues from arguments falls. However, the authorities demonstrate a consistent concern that this question is approached so as to maintain a "high threshold" that has been said to be required for establishing a serious irregularity (Petrochemical Industries v Dow [2012] 2 Lloyd's Rep 691 paragraph 15; Primera v Jiangsu [2014] 1 Lloyd's Rep 255 paragraph 7).
(iii) While there is no expressed statutory requirement that the Section 68(2)(d) issue must be "essential", "key" or "crucial", a matter will constitute an "issue" where the whole of the applicant's claim could have depended upon how it was resolved, such that "fairness demanded" that the question be dealt with (Petrochemical Industries at paragraph 21).
(iv) However, there will be a failure to deal with an "issue" where the determination of that "issue" is essential to the decision reached in the award (World Trade Corporation v C Czarnikow Sugar Ltd [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 422 at paragraph 16). An essential issue arises in this context where the decision cannot be justified as a particular key issue has not been decided which is critical to the result and there has not been a decision on all the issues necessary to resolve the dispute or disputes (Weldon Plan Ltd v The Commission for the New Towns [2000] BLR 496 at paragraph 21).
(v) The issue must have been put to the tribunal as an issue and in the same terms as is complained about in the Section 68(2) application (Primera at paragraphs 12 and 17).
(vi) If the tribunal has dealt with the issue in any way, Section 68(2)(d) is inapplicable and that is the end of the enquiry (Primera at paragraphs 40-1); it does not matter for the purposes of Section 68(2)(d) that the tribunal has dealt with it well, badly or indifferently.
(vii) It matters not that the tribunal might have done things differently or expressed its conclusions on the essential issues at greater length (Latvian Shipping v Russian People's Insurance Co [2012] 2 Lloyd's Rep 181, paragraph 30).
(viii) A failure to provide any or any sufficient reasons for the decision is not the same as failing to deal with an issue (Fidelity Management v Myriad International [2005] 2 Lloyd's Rep 508, paragraph 10, World Trade Corporation, paragraph 19). A failure by a tribunal to set out each step by which they reach its conclusion or deal with each point made by a party is not a failure to deal with an issue that was put to it (Hussman v Al Ameen [2000] 2 Lloyd's Rep 83).
(ix) There is not a failure to deal with an issue where arbitrators have misdirected themselves on the facts or drew from the primary facts unjustified inferences (World Trade Corporation at paragraph 45). The fact that the reasoning is wrong does not as such ground a complaint under Section 68(2)(d) (Petro Ranger [2001] 2 Lloyd's Rep 348, Atkins v Sec of State for Transport [2013] EWHC 139 (TCC), paragraph 24).
(x) A tribunal does not fail to deal with issues if it does not answer every question that qualifies as an "issue". It can "deal with" an issue where that issue does not arise in view of its decisions on the facts or its legal conclusions. A tribunal may deal with an issue by so deciding a logically anterior point such that the other issue does not arise (Petrochemical Industries at paragraph 27. If the tribunal decides all those issues put to it that were essential to be dealt with for the tribunal to come fairly to its decision on the dispute or disputes between the parties, it will have dealt with all the issues (Buyuk Camlica Shipping Trading & Industry Co Inc v Progress Bulk Carriers Ltd [2010] EWHC 442 (Comm), paragraph 30).
(xi) It is up to the tribunal how to structure an award and how to address the essential issues; if the issue does not arise because of the route the tribunal has followed for the purposes of arriving at its conclusion, Section 68(2)(d) will not be engaged. However, if the issue does arise by virtue of the route the Tribunal has followed for the purposes of arriving at its conclusion, Section 68(2)(d) will be engaged.
(xii) Whether there has been a failure by the tribunal to deal with an essential issue involves a matter of a fair, commercial and commonsense reading (as opposed to a hypercritical or excessively syntactical reading) of the award in question in the factual context of what was argued or put to the tribunal by the parties (and where appropriate the evidence) (Ascot Commodities v Olam [2002] CLC 277 and Atkins, paragraph 36). The Court can consider the pleadings and the written and oral submissions of the parties to the tribunal in this regard.
(h) In relation to the requirement for substantial injustice to have arisen, this is to eliminate technical and unmeritorious challenges (Lesotho, paragraph 28). It is inherently likely that substantial injustice would have occurred if the tribunal has failed to deal with essential issues (Ascot, 284H-285A).
(i) For the purposes of meeting the "substantial injustice" test, an applicant need not show that it would have succeeded on the issue with which the tribunal failed to deal or that the tribunal would have reached a conclusion favourable to him; it necessary only for him to show that (i) his position was "reasonably arguable", and (ii) had the tribunal found in his favour, the tribunal might well have reached a different conclusion in its award (Vee Networks Limited v Econet Wireless International [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 192, paragraph 40).
(j) The substantial injustice requirement will not be met in the event that, even if the applicant had succeeded on the issue with which the tribunal failed to deal, the Court is satisfied that the result of the arbitration would have been the same by reason of other of the tribunal's findings not the subject of the challenge."
"In their Lordships' opinion, a legitimate basis on which the Court of Appeal could assert the right to disagree with the judge's evaluation of the evidence and of the witnesses was absent. It can be easily accepted that excessive delay in delivery of a judgment may require a very careful perusal of the judge's findings of fact and of his reasons for his conclusions in order to ensure that the delay has not caused injustice to the losing party. It will be important to consider the quality of the judge's notes, not only of the evidence but also of the advocates' submissions. In the present case the judge's notes were comprehensive and of a high quality. As to demeanour, two things can be said. First, in their Lordships' collective experience, a judge re-reading his notes of evidence after the elapse of a considerable period of time can expect, if the notes are of the requisite quality, his impressions of the witnesses to be revived by the re-reading. Second, every experienced judge, and Georges J. was certainly that, is likely to make notes as a trial progresses recording the impressions being made on him by the witnesses. Notes of this character would not, without the judge's permission or special request being made to him, form part of the record on an appeal. They might be couched in language quite unsuitable for public record. In the present case, delay, with a consequent dimming of the judge's recollection of the evidence and of the witnesses' demeanour, was not a ground of appeal. In these circumstances it is, in their Lordships' opinion, impermissible to conclude from the fact of a 12 month delay that the judge had a difficult task, let alone an "impossible" one as Singh J.A. suggested, in remembering the demeanour of witnesses."
"The function, however, of the court on hearing this appeal is not to impose sanctions or to investigate the reasons why the delay occurred. The function of this court on this appeal, which is principally brought against the judge's findings of fact, is to consider whether any of those findings of fact should be set aside and a retrial ordered. Findings of fact are not automatically to be set aside because a judgment was seriously delayed. As in any appeal on fact, the court has to ask whether the judge was plainly wrong. This high test takes account of the fact that trial judges normally have a special advantage in fact-finding, derived from their having seen the witnesses give their evidence. However there is an additional test in the case of a seriously delayed judgment. If the reviewing court finds that the judge's recollection of the evidence is at fault on any material point, then (unless the error could not be due to the delay in the delivery of judgment) it will order a retrial if, having regard to the diminished importance in those circumstances of the special advantage of the trial judge in the interpretation of evidence, it cannot be satisfied that the judge came to the right conclusion. This is the keystone of the additional standard of review on appeal against findings of fact in this situation. To go further would be likely to be unfair to the winning party. That party might have been the winning party even if judgment had not been delayed."
"…it seems to me clear that, as a matter of good sense and authority, even a long delay such as has occurred in this case will not automatically invalidate or even undermine the judgment when it is eventually produced, although it must cause an appellate court to look very critically at the judgment. In the present case, I agree with Arden and Longmore LJJ that it is clear from the contents of the judgment, the grounds on which the Judge decided the issues, and the full and clear notes which he made, that the long delay in producing the judgment is not a good ground for allowing Mr Bond Senior's appeal, and that, once that ground is disposed of there is no other basis for challenging the Judge's conclusion."
"17 However, to say that the judgment was defective, even seriously so, is not necessarily to say that there has been an injustice which requires the appeal to be allowed. The judgments in the three cases considered by this Court in English were very seriously defective, but the Court was able in the end, by careful analysis of the judgment in the context of the evidence and submissions made, to satisfy itself that the judge had in each case properly performed his or her judicial function. Likewise in this case, if it is possible to demonstrate that, whatever the first impression created by the way he constructed his judgment, the Judge did in fact carry out a proper judicial evaluation of the essential issues and did not simply surrender his responsibility to counsel, then the judgment should stand. This involves no qualification of the principle that justice must be seen to be done; but in deciding whether that is so it is necessary, at least in a case like this, to go beyond first impressions.
18 In the end, and not without some hesitation, I have come to the conclusion that the judgment in this case does show, when examined carefully in the context known to the parties, that the Judge performed his essential judicial role and that his reasons for deciding the dispositive issues in the way that he did are sufficiently apparent. I take the sections of his judgment in turn."
"42 In these days of written final submissions and computer literacy it must be tempting for a judge who has formed a clear view of a primarily factual dispute to frame his judgment by lifting large parts of the written submissions of the party he has decided should win and incorporating them in his judgment. But to do so without (or with only minimal) acknowledgment and without making reference to the submissions made by the other side inevitably leaves a deep sense of grievance with the losing party. He or she will understandably feel that the judge has never properly engaged with the case when forming his judgment.
43 It also puts this court in a position of considerable difficulty because it has to make a detailed examination of underlying factual material to see whether the judge has truly engaged with the losing party's case when the judge could easily have shown that he had so engaged, by reciting the main points made by the losing party and stating why he rejects them. Having made that detailed examination, all of us are satisfied that the judge has in fact engaged with the defendants' cases and has rightly seen that they have no substance; it would therefore serve no purpose to order a new trial before a different judge."
"…Once it is recognised that [the tribunal] has dealt with the issue, there is no scope for the application of section 68(2)(d). As Mr Dunning correctly put it, once it is recognised that the tribunal has "dealt with" the issue, the sub-section does not involve some qualitative assessment of how the tribunal dealt with it. Provided the tribunal has dealt with it, it does not matter whether it has done so well, badly or indifferently.
41 It is wrong in principle to look at the quality of the reasoning if the tribunal has dealt with the issue. This emerges clearly from the judgment of Thomas J (as he then was) in Hussman (Europe) Ltd v Al Ameen Development & Trade Co [2000] 2 Lloyd's Rep 83 at [56]:
'I do not consider that s.68(2)(d) requires a tribunal to set out each step by which they reach their conclusion or deal with each point made by a party in an arbitration. Any failure by the arbitrators in that respect is not a failure to deal with an issue that was put to it. It may amount to a criticism of the reasoning, but it is no more than that.'"
The Award
"78. Essentially, I had to decide whether, as the Claimants said, all of the loss and damage that occurred at Falmouth and then subsequently at Galway was caused by the Respondents' admitted breach of contract and negligence or whether any of the Respondents' potential three causes was correct, namely:
(i) misalignment caused by normal wear and tear of the Flexi-mounts;
(ii) failure to turn the engine when not in use; or
(iii) some underlying problem, or perhaps more than one problem (but in any event nothing to do with the ADPs) which was the common cause, or a common cause, for both sets of observed damage - the root cause perhaps lying in the Trelleborg mounting system.
79. Both experts were doing their best to assist the Tribunal. Nevertheless, I have to make a decision as to whose expert evidence was to be preferred. Having given the matter very careful consideration, I have concluded that Mr Gibson's evidence should be preferred. I consider that he was consistent throughout his reports and in oral evidence. It was also backed up by Finite Element Analysis (albeit evidence served late and criticised by the Respondents, which I thought overstated). The Respondents' expert case did, as the Claimants said, metamorphose.
80. I reject the three different cases put forward by the Respondents, namely normal wear and tear, false brinelling and common cause with 2011 and find as a fact that Mr Gibson's evidence is correct and that the damage to the crankshafts was caused by the ADPs being in place.
81. It follows from the above that (in principle) the removal of the ADPs, the removal and polishing of the port and starboard crankshafts and replacement of bearings and the realignment of all three engines at Falmouth were caused by the Respondents' breach of contract. It also follows that (in principle) the loss and expense of replacing the Flexi-mounts and Vulkan Couplings at Galway and the consequent necessary realignment of all three engines was caused by the Respondents' breach of contract. I say "in principle" because the precise quantum of the Claimants' loss is, of course, still to be determined."
Delay
"It is unnecessary and in the circumstances undesirable for me to express a view as to whether the arbitrator came to the right conclusion, even if by the wrong route, or whether, had he ignored the 2003 amendments, he should have reached the same or a different conclusion. The element of serious injustice in the context of section 68 does not in such a case depend on the arbitrator having come to the wrong conclusion as a matter of law or fact but whether he was caused by adopting inappropriate means to reach one conclusion whereas had he adopted appropriate means he might well have reached another conclusion favourable to the applicant. Thus, where there has been an irregularity of procedure, it is enough if it is shown that it caused the arbitrator to reach a conclusion unfavourable to the applicant which, but for the irregularity, he might well never have reached, provided always that the opposite conclusion is at least reasonably arguable. Above all it is not normally appropriate for the court to try the material issue in order to ascertain whether substantial injustice has been caused. To do so would be an entirely inappropriate inroad into the autonomy of the arbitral process."
No failure to deal with the issues
(1) Failure to deal with the "common cause" issue.(2) Failure to deal with the FEA evidence.
(3) Failure to deal with the evidence of TMI's failure properly to maintain the engines.
(4) Failure to deal with Damen's case of contributory negligence.
By the time of the hearing the third and fourth grounds had been abandoned.
"49 However, Mr Dunning correctly points out that it is beside the point whether the tribunal's conclusion on the evidence is correct. The claimants cannot seriously begin to suggest that the tribunal has not dealt with an issue and what this part of the application really is, is a scarcely veiled attempt to challenge the findings of fact of the tribunal which the claimants do not like. Even if the tribunal had overlooked a particular piece of evidence in reaching its findings of fact, that is not susceptible to challenge under section 68 or otherwise: see per Colman J in World Trade Corporation v C Czarnikow Sugar Ltd [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 422 at [45]:
"On analysis, these criticisms are all directed to asserting that the arbitrators misdirected themselves on the facts or drew from the primary facts unjustified inferences. Those facts are said to be material to an "issue", namely what were the terms of the oral agreement. However, each stage of the evidential analysis directed to the resolution of that issue was not an "issue" within Section 68(2)(d). It was merely a step in the evaluation of the evidence. That the arbitrators failed to take into account evidence or a document said to be relevant to that issue is not properly to be regarded as a failure to deal with an issue. It is, in truth, a criticism which goes no further than asserting that the arbitrators made mistakes in their findings of primary fact or drew from the primary facts unsustainable inferences."
50 It is clearly not appropriate to use an application under section 68 to challenge the findings of fact made by the tribunal. If it were otherwise every disappointed party could say it had been treated unfairly by pointing to some piece of evidence in its favour which was not referred to in the Reasons or not given the weight it feels it should have been. That is precisely the situation in which the Court should not intervene. Matters of fact and evaluation of the evidence are for the arbitrators."
Conclusion