Troy Maritime v Clearlake Shipping

From DMC
Jump to: navigation, search

DMC/SandT/18/07

England

Troy Maritime SA v Clearlake Shipping Pte Ltd

English Commercial Court: Butcher J.: [2018] EWHC 2310 (Comm): 31 July 2018

Mr Y. Kulkarni QC, instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan, for the Claimant

Mr T. Bird, instructed by Hill Dickinson, for the Defendant

DEVIATION FROM THE CONTRACT VOYAGE: WHETHER DEVIATION REASONABLE IN ALL THE CIRCUMSTANCES: FINDING OF FACT BY ARBITRATION TRIBUNAL: WHETHER COURT BOUND BY THAT FINDING

Summary

This case decided that a tribunal’s decision on whether the deviation of a vessel had been for a “reasonable purpose” was a finding of fact, and could not be successfully appealed as a point of law under section 69 of the Arbitration Act 1996.

Case Note contributed by Edward White BA(Hons), GDL, Associate at Thomas Cooper Singapore LLP.

Background

In July 2016, Troy Maritime SA (the “Owners”) chartered the vessel MV Andreas (the “Vessel”) to Clearlake Shipping Pte Ltd (the “Charterers”) for a voyage from Tuapse, Russia, to the ARA Hamburg range, on an amended BPVoy4 form for the carriage of a cargo of unleaded gas oil (the “Charterparty”). Clause 26 of the Charterparty provided the following: “The Vessel shall have liberty to sail with or without pilots, to tow or go to the assistance of vessels in distress and to deviate for the purpose of saving life and property, or for any other reasonable purpose.”

Article IV Rule 4 of the Hague-Visby Rules (the “HVR”) was also incorporated into the Charterparty, which provided that “any reasonable deviation shall not be deemed to be an infringement or breach of these Rules, or of the contract of carriage, and the carrier shall not be liable for any loss or damage resulting therefrom”.

During the voyage, on 11 July 2016, the Vessel’s second engineer requested permission to disembark at Istanbul due to “serious family problems”. The Vessel applied to its flag state, the Panama Maritime Authority (the “PMA”), for special dispensation to sail without a second engineer for the remainder of the voyage. The PMA granted the Vessel’s request, on the condition that a second engineer boarded the Vessel by no later than 20 July 2016 - this being the ETA in Hamburg that the Vessel had provided in its application.

It became apparent that the Vessel would not reach its discharge port by 20 July 2016. Accordingly, the Owners arranged for the Vessel to call at Gibraltar in order to take on both a replacement second engineer and a technician needed to service the Vessel’s auxiliary boiler. The Vessel subsequently collided with a submerged nuclear submarine off Gibraltar, following which the parties referred a number of disputes to arbitration.

The Arbitration

One of the disputes referred to arbitration was a counterclaim by the Charterers for damages arising from the Vessel’s deviation to Gibraltar. The Owners argued that this deviation had been for a reasonable purpose under Clause 26, as the Vessel needed to pick up a replacement second engineer to ensure compliance with her safe manning certificate.

Though the Owners did not seek to rely on Article IV Rule 4 of the HVR, the Tribunal noted that it might have been open for them to do so. It would become common ground between the parties that Lord Atkin’s test from Stag Line v Foscolo, Mango and Company [1932] AC 328 was to be applied to both Clause 26 and Article IV Rule 4. This required the Tribunal to consider what departure from the contract voyage a prudent person might make, who has in mind all the relevant circumstances existing at the time, including the interest of all the parties concerned.

The Tribunal found that, although it was reasonable for the Owners to allow the second engineer to leave the Vessel at Istanbul, the deviation to Gibraltar could have been avoided altogether had the Owners requested a longer dispensation period from the PMA in their initial application, sufficient to cover the chartered voyage. The deviation was not therefore justified by a reasonable purpose, and the Charterers were entitled to claim for the losses arising from it.

Appeal under section 69 of the Arbitration Act 1996

The Owners were granted permission to appeal to the Commercial Court on the following question of law: “Is a deviation of a vessel in the course of a voyage, in order to comply with flag state requirements for the maintenance of her Safe Manning Certificate, a ‘reasonable purpose’ within the meaning of clause 26 of the parties’ charterparty or a ‘reasonable deviation’ within the meaning of Article IV, r. 4 of the Hague-Visby Rules?”

The Owners’ main contention was that the Tribunal had based its decision solely or substantially on the issue of whether the Owners should have sought a longer dispensation period from the PMA. This, the Owners argued, was not a “relevant circumstance”, considering the Charterers had not claimed that the Owners’ failure to do so was a breach of the Charterparty in and of itself.

Citing Lord Russell, Lord Macmillan and Lord Warrington in Stag Line, the Charterers in response argued that the Tribunal’s decision as to whether or not the deviation was reasonable amounted to a finding of fact, and fell outside the scope of a section 69 appeal.

Furthermore, the Charterers argued that, as the applicability of Lord Atkin’s Stag Line test was not in dispute, there was no question of law to be answered by the Court. Rather, the Owners’ appeal alleged the incorrect application of legal principle (correctly identified by the Tribunal) to the facts of the case, which could not itself be considered an “error of law” (Benaim (UK) Ltd v Davies Middleton & Davies Ltd [2005] EWHC 1370 (TCC)).

The Charterers also took issue with the question the Owners had asked the court to determine, as it was premised on a finding by the Tribunal that the deviation had been for the purpose of complying with Flag State requirements for the maintenance of the Vessel’s Safe Manning Certificate. The Tribunal had not, in fact, made any finding to this effect.

Finally, the Charterers contended that the Tribunal was in any event entitled to consider the Owners’ failure to seek a longer dispensation period in reaching its decision, and that its decision was within the range of reasonable results which a tribunal correctly directing itself on the law could have reached.

Butcher J. found in favour of the Charterers and dismissed the Owners’ appeal as “an attempt to upset a factual decision of the Tribunal”. It was for the Tribunal to decide, as a question of fact, what the “relevant circumstances” were for the purposes of determining whether a deviation had been reasonable.

The judge in any event took no issue with the Tribunal’s findings of fact and found no reason to exclude antecedent faults, such as the failure to request a longer dispensation period, from the numerous “relevant circumstances” that a Tribunal would be entitled to consider under the Stag Line test.

Comment

This case illustrates the difficulties faced by parties seeking to bring section 69 applications before the court. In particular, it demonstrates the reluctance of the courts to entertain any challenges to a tribunal’s finding of fact, even when the challenge is “dressed up” as an appeal on a point of law.