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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Eleni Shipping Ltd v Transgrain Shipping BV [2019] EWHC 910 (Comm) (10 April 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/910.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 910 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERT COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
AND IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Eleni Shipping Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Transgrain Shipping B.V. |
Defendant |
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Thomas Macey-Dare QC (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28 March 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
The facts
The Charterparty terms
"15. That in the event of the loss of time from deficiency and/or default of Owners' men or deficiency of stores, fire, breakdown or damages to hull, machinery or equipment, grounding, detention by average accidents to ship or cargo, drydocking for the purpose of examination or painting bottom, or by any other cause preventing the full working of the vessel, the payment of hire shall cease for the time thereby lost and bunker consumed during the period of suspended hire for the Owners' account (except when caused by the actions of Charterers or their Agents / servants); and if upon the voyage the speed be reduced by defect in or breakdown of any part of her hull, machinery or equipment, the time so lost, and the cost of any extra fuel consumed in consequence thereof, and all extra expenses directly related to loading and discharging and bunkering shall be deducted from the hire. Only amounts not in dispute are allowed to be deducted from the hire. (See Clause 49)"
"Clause 49 – Capture, Seizure and Arrest
Should the vessel be captures [sic] or seized or detained or arrested by any authority or by any legal process during the currency of this Charter Party, the payment of hire shall be suspended for the actual time lost, unless such capture or seizure or detention or arrest is occasioned by any personal act or omission or default of the Charterers or their agents. Any extra expenses incurred by and/or during the above capture or seizure or detention or arrest shall be for the Owners' account.
Should the vessel be arrested during the currency of this Charter Party at the suit of any party having or purporting to have a claim against or any interest in the vessel, hire under this Charter Party shall not be payable in respect of any period during which the vessel is not fully at Charterers' disposal, and any directly related / proven expenses shall be for Owners' account, unless such arrest is due to action against Charterers or sub-Charterers or their Agents or the Contractors or the cargo Shippers or Consignees, thence hire is payable and Charterers undertake the responsibility to release the vessel by taking appropriate and required measures (issuance of security / etc) as the case maybe or arise."
"Clause 101 – Piracy Clause
Charterers are allowed to transit Gulf of Aden any time, all extra war risk premium and/or kidnap and ransom as quoted by vessel's Underwriters, if any, will be reimbursed by Charterers. Also any additional crew war bonus, if applicable will be reimbursed by Charterers to Owners against relevant bona-fide vouchers. In case vessel should be threatened/kidnapped by reason of piracy, payment of hire shall be suspended. It's remain understood [sic] that during transit of Gulf of Aden the vessel will follow all procedures as required for such transit including but not limited the instructions as received by the patrolling squad in the area for safe participating to the convoy west or east bound."
The approach to construction
Clause 49
"Fundamentally, though, we cannot accept that "captured" is a word that can fairly be read as qualified by "by any authority or by any legal process". In the context of a charter which clearly anticipates piracy risks and in an age when questions of prize – a concept in which the word "captured" might reasonably be seen as something an "authority" might be involved in – no longer arise, we consider that the word must here be read disjunctively from the causes that follow."
Clause 101
(1) In paragraph 29 the majority recorded the Charterers' argument that there was no defined geographical extent for the Gulf of Aden. Reference was there made to two potential definitions, one being that used by the International Hydrographic Organisation which treated the zone ending at its eastern border at 51.16°E, and another the area used by the Joint War Committee to define for the purpose of war risk insurance what it called the "Gulf of Aden transit area" extending to 57°E. The western borders of the two areas were also significantly different. The capture by pirates in this case took place at 60.50°E, further east in the Arabian sea than would be comprised by either of those two definitions. At paragraph 6 the majority recorded that the capture occurred after "sailing through the Gulf of Aden and into the Arabian Sea without incident".
(2) In paragraph 34 the majority held that "the expression "Gulf of Aden" has no clear meaning in the context of a charterparty of this kind". In paragraph 37 they referred to the clause being "concerned with a transit through an area that remains undefined" (their emphasis). In paragraph 41 they described their construction as consistent with the fact that it does not depend upon geographical limits of the Gulf being ascertainable."
(3) In paragraph 36 the majority found that "it is clear on the evidence that the parties will have known – as indeed the whole shipping community knew at the relevant time – that transiting the Gulf of Aden exposed ships to the risk of piracy not only in whatever might have been understood as the Gulf, but also in the Arabian Sea, on occasions hundreds of miles from the Somali coast; and that the risk of piracy was expanding.
Conclusion