Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5665 of 2002
Appeal (civil) 5666 of 2002
PETITIONER:
Liverpool & London S.P. & I Asson. Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
M.V. Sea Success I & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/11/2003
BENCH:
CJI & S.B. Sinha.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. SINHA, J :
THE BACKGROUND FACT:
The appellant (Club) herein is an association incorporated under
the laws of the United Kingdom. It is a mutual association of ship
owners. It offers insurance cover in respect of the vessels entered
with it for diverse third party risks associated with the operation and
trading of vessels. According to the appellant, no vessel operates
without a Protection & Indemnity (P&I) cover and the same has been made
compulsory to allow a ship to enter major ports in India.
’Sea Ranger’ and ’Sea Glory’ are the sister vessels of the 1st
respondent vessel and they are allegedly owned by the 2nd respondent. The
first two vessels entered into a contract with the appellant’s
association for the years 1998-1999 and 1999-2000 but they have not paid
the unpaid insurance premium due and payable by the 2nd respondent for
various P&I risks for which they had been insured. These unpaid
insurance calls being "necessaries" was enforceable within the
"admiralty jurisdiction" of the Bombay High Court.
For the arrest of the 1st respondent vessel which came to Mumbai
Port within the territorial waters of India, a suit was filed by the
club inter alia for the prayers : "(a) for a decree against the
respondents in the sum of US$1,18,194.89 together with interest at the
rate of 12% per annum, which was the unpaid insurance premium amount due
to the club and payable by the 2nd respondent; and (b) for arrest of the
1st respondent vessel to secure the claim."
On an application for arrest of the 1st respondent vessel having
been made, the 2nd respondent appeared and undertook to furnish security
in respect of the appellant’s claim and further gave an undertaking that
until the security is furnished the said vessel will not leave the Port
of Mumbai. However, thereafter S.S. Shipping Corporation Inc., Liberia
claiming to be the registered owner of the 1st respondent furnished a
bank-guarantee in relation to the appellant’s claim in discharge of the
undertaking of security given by the second respondent. The 1st
respondent thereafter took out a Notice of Motion for rejection of the
plaint purported to be under Order 7 Rule 11(a) of the Code of Civil
Procedure inter alia on the ground that the averments contained therein
do not disclose a cause of action as the claim of unpaid insurance
premium was not a "necessary" within the meaning of Section 5 of the
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Admiralty Courts Act, 1861. A learned Single Judge of the High Court
after hearing the Notice of Motion by an order dated 1-2/2/2001 referred
the said question to a Division Bench as it could not agree with a
decision rendered by another learned Single Judge. However, on the
other two grounds it discharged the Notice of Motion holding that the
averments made in paragraphs 1 and 14 of the plaint inter alia to the
effect that all the three ships are beneficially owned by the 2nd
respondent disclose a cause of action.
An appeal thereagainst was preferred by the respondent herein.
The Division Bench took up the appeal preferred by the respondent herein
as also the reference made by the learned Single Judge and passed a
common judgment.
ISSUES :
The questions which arose for consideration before the High Court
were:
(i) whether arrears of insurance premium due and payable to the
appellant by the 2nd respondent would fall within the scope and
ambit of Section 5 of the Admiralty Courts Act, 1861;
(ii) whether refusing to reject the plaint under Order 7 Rule 11(a)
upon holding that the plaint discloses a cause of action is a
’judgment’ within the meaning of Clause 15 of the Letters
Patent of the Bombay High Court and was, thus, appealable; and
(iii) Whether the averments made in paragraphs 1 and 14 of the plaint
disclose sufficient cause of action for maintaining a suit.
The Division Bench while answering the question No. 1 in favour of
appellant, answered question Nos. 2 and 3 against it. Appeal No. 226 of
2001 has been filed by the ’club’ whereas Civil Appeal No. 5666 of 2002
has been filed by the ’vessel’.
Submissions :
Mr. Bharucha, the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
"Vessel" would inter alia submit:
(i) The amount of arrears of insurance premium alleged to be due to
the 1st respondent towards release calls is not a maritime claim
entitling the Club to invoke the admiralty jurisdiction of the
High Court as such unpaid insurance money does not constitute
’necessaries’ within the meaning of Section 5 of the Admiralty
Courts Act, 1861.
(ii) Sufficiently direct and proximate connection between insurance
and the vessel is a prerequisite for bringing an action in rem.
Insurance is meant primarily as a means of indemnifying and
protecting the vessel owner against the loss of his vessel
and/or claims that that may arise as a result of damage or loss
caused by the vessel. Although it may be a commercial
necessity but the same would not come within the purview of the
term ’necessaries’ within the meaning of the provisions of the
said Act. The provisions contained in the Admiralty Courts Act
of 1840 and 1861, Section 22 of the Supreme Court of Judicature
Act, 1925, the 1952 Brussels Arrest Convention as also the
Administration of Justice Act, 1956 disclose one uniform
feature that in order that a monetary claim qualifies for and
is recognized as a maritime claim the same must be necessary
for operation of the ship.
(iii) In United Kingdom, it has consistently been held for more than
a century that unpaid insurance premium is not a "necessary"
within the conventional meaning of the said term as understood
in maritime law. The said view has been reiterated by the
Courts of Australia, South Africa and Singapore. In support of
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the said contention, strong reliance has been placed on Queen
Vs. Judge of the City of London Court [1891 1 QB 273], The
Beldis [1936 P. 51], Webster Vs. Seekamp [1821 4B & Ald 352],
Heinrich Bjorn [1883 8 P.D. 151], The Andre Theodore [10
Aspinall 94], Stokes Vs. The Conference [1887 (8) NSWR 10], The
River Rima [1988 2 L Rep 193], a South African Court decision
in The Emerald Transporter [1985 2 SALR 152] as also a decision
of Singapore High Court in The Golden Petroleum [1994 1 SLR
92].
(iv) The expression "necessaries supplied to any ship" although has
not statutorily been defined; over a long period of time, the
same had attained a definite connotation, i.e., goods or
services supplied to a specifically identified ship in order to
successfully prosecute the voyage in question, and, thus,
applying the said test unpaid insurance premium does not answer
the said definition. The matter has furthermore to be looked
at from the point of view of physical necessity and
practicality and not from the viewpoint of prudence or sound
economics.
(v) There are a large number of categories of insurance from hull
and machinery insurance, to protection and indemnity (P&I)
cover, through war risks, to freight demurrage and defence
cover (FD&D), oil spill cover (TOVALOP), and strike cover etc
and in that view of the matter if P&I should be held to be a
necessary, others are not, the same would lead to an
incongruous situation.
(vi) In view of the decision in The Aifanourious [1980 2 L Reps.
403] as also the decision rendered by the House of Lords in
Gatoil International Inc. Vs. Arwkright Boston Manufacturers
Mutual Insurance Co. & Other The Sandrina [1985 (1) All ER
129], holding that claim for unpaid insurance has never been
recognized as maritime claim under any other head and the
Courts of England expressly held the same to have been excluded
as such under Article 1 of the Brussels Arrest Convention,
1952. Such a claim, thus, due to unpaid insurance premium
would not be a maritime claim also under the head
"disbursements made on account of a ship".
(vii) In the decision of this Court in M.V. Elisabeth [(1993) Supp. 2
SCC 433], it was merely held that the High Courts in India will
have an extended jurisdiction under the Admiralty Courts Act,
1861 and the said principle cannot be further extended.
(viii) As the maritime jurisdiction of the High Courts in India was
derived from the pre-independence statutes and as the High
Courts of India exercise the same jurisdiction as that of the
courts in England, it must necessarily be held that the
interpretation of the word "necessaries" rendered by the
English Courts and which has been followed by other courts
except by the American Court should prevail.
Mr. Prashant S. Pratap, the learned counsel appearing on behalf
of the Club, on the other hand, would submit that:
(i) "necessaries" are the things which a prudent owner would
provide to enable a ship to perform the functions wherefor she
has been engaged and, thus, the provision of services would
come within the definition of necessaries.
(ii) The term "necessaries" must be construed in a broad and
liberal manner keeping in mind the ever changing requirements
of a ship to be able to trade in commerce.
(iii) Contemporary maritime statutes in England do not use the term
"necessaries" but the American Federal Maritime Liens Act does
and, thus, decision rendered by the American Courts that
insurance is a "necessary" should be held to be correct.
(Equilease Corp. Vs. M.V. Sampson 793 F.2d 598- U.S. Court of
Appeals).
(iv) A valid P&I insurance cover is necessary for a ship to call at
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major ports in India and consequently so far as India is
concerned, it is a necessity having regard to the fact that
Mumbai Port, JNPT and Kolkata Port have issued a statutory
direction in this behalf.
(v) The domestic legislation in India also provide for a compulsory
insurance. Reference in this connection has been placed on the
Inland Vessels Act, 1917 (as amended in the year 1977), the
Merchant Shipping Act, 1956 (as amended in 1983) and Multimodal
Transportation of Goods Act, 1993 (as amended in 2000) and in
that view of the matter the pedantic and regressive view should
be discouraged specially in the light of the judgment of this
Court in M.V. Elisabeth (supra).
(vi) By reason of the 1999 Arrest Convention inter alia unpaid
insurance calls had been added and in absence of any
codification and maritime claim by a statute in India the same
should be taken into consideration for determination of the
jurisdiction of the High Court. Several countries such as
Canada, South Africa, Australia, China and Korea have given the
claim for unpaid insurance premium in respect of a ship, the
status of a maritime claim.
(vii) Flexibilities being the virtue of law court, the High Court has
rightly held that the marine premium would come within the
purview of the term "necessaries" having regard to the global
change and outlook in trade and commerce. Reliance in this
connection has been placed on M.V. Al Quamar Vs. Tsavliris
Salvage (International) Ltd. & Ors. [(2000) 8 SCC 278].
STATUTORY PROVISIONS :
The relevant provisions of Admiralty Court Act, 1840 are as
follows:
"3. WHENEVER A VESSEL SHALL BE ARRESTED, ETC.,
COURT TO HAVE JURISDICTION OVER CLAIMS OF
MORTGAGEES: Whenever any ship or vessel shall be
under arrest by process issuing from the said
High Court of Admiralty, or the proceeds of any
ship or vessel having been so arrested shall
have been brought into and be in the registry of
the said court, in either such case the said
court shall have full jurisdiction to take
cognizance of all claims and causes of action of
any person in respect of any mortgage of such
ship or vessel, and to decide any suit
instituted by any such person in respect of any
such claims or causes of action respectively.
4. COURT TO DECIDE QUESTIONS OF TITLE, ETC.: The
said Court of Admiralty shall have jurisdiction
to decide all questions as to the title to or
ownership of any ship or vessel, or the proceeds
thereof remaining in the registry, arising in
any cause of possession, salvage, damage, wages
or bottomry, which shall be instituted in the
said court after the passing of this Act.
6. THE COURT IN CERTAIN CASES MAY ADJUDICATE,
ETC.: The High Court of Admiralty shall have
jurisdiction to decide all claims and demands
whatsoever in the nature of salvage for services
rendered to or damage received by any ship or
sea-going vessel or in the nature of towage, or
for necessaries supplied to any foreign ship or
sea-going vessel, and to enforce the payment
thereof, whether such ship or vessel may have
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been within the body of a country, or upon the
high seas, at the time when the services were
rendered or damage received, or necessaries
furnished, in respect of which such claim is
made.
The relevant provisions of Admiralty Court Act, 1861 are as under:
"4. AS TO CLAIMS FOR BUILDING, EQUIPPING, OR
REPAIRING OF SHIPS: The High Court of Admiralty
shall have jurisdiction over any claim for the
building, equipping, or repairing of any ship,
if at the time of the institution of the cause
the ship or the proceeds thereof are under
arrest of the court.
5. AS TO CLAIMS FOR NECESSARIES: The High Court
of Admiralty shall have jurisdiction over any
claim for necessaries supplied to any ship
elsewhere than in the port to which the ship
belongs, unless it is shown to the satisfaction
of the court that at the time of the institution
of the cause any owner or part owner of the ship
is domiciled in England or Wales: Provided
always, that if in any such cause the plaintiff
do not recover twenty pounds, he shall not be
entitled to.
6. AS TO CLAIMS FOR DAMAGE TO CARGO IMPORTED:
The High Court of Admiralty shall have
jurisdiction over any claim by the owner or
consignee or assignee of any bill of lading of
any goods carried into any port in England or
Wales in any ship, for damage done to the goods
or any part thereof by the negligence or
misconduct of or for any breach of duty or
breach of contract on the part of the owner,
master, or crew of the ship, unless it is shown
to the satisfaction of the court that at the
time of the institution of the cause any owner
or part owner of the ship is domiciled in
England or Wales: Provided always, that if any
such cause the plaintiff do not recover twenty
pounds, he shall not be entitled to any costs,
charges, or expenses incurred by him therein,
unless the judge shall certify that the cause
was a fit one to be tried in the said court.
8. HIGH COURT OF ADMRILATY TO DECIDE QUESTIONS
AS TO OWNERSHIP, ETC. OF SHIPS: The High Court
of Admiralty shall have jurisdiction to decide
all questions arising between the co-owners, or
any of them, touching the ownership, possession,
employment, and earnings of any ship registered
at any port in England or Wales, or any share
thereof, and may settle all accounts outstanding
and unsettled between the parties in relation
thereto, and may direct the said ship or any
share thereof to be sold, and may make such
order in the premises as to it shall seem fit.
Section 2 of Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act, 1890 reads thus:
"2. Colonial Courts of Admiralty. - (1) Every
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court of law in a British possession, which is
for the time being declared in pursuance of this
Act to be a Court of Admiralty, or which, if no
such declaration is in force in the possession,
has therein original unlimited civil
jurisdiction, shall be a Court of Admiralty,
with the jurisdiction in this Act mentioned, and
may for the purpose of that jurisdiction,
exercise all the powers which it possesses for
the purpose of its other civil jurisdiction, and
such Court in reference to the jurisdiction
conferred by this Act is in this Act referred to
as a Colonial Court of Admiralty....
(2) The jurisdiction of a Colonial Court of
Admiralty shall, subject to the provisions of
this Act, be over the like places, persons,
matters, and things, as the Admiralty
jurisdiction of the High Court in England,
whether existing by virtue of any statute or
otherwise, and the Colonial Court of Admiralty
may exercise such jurisdiction in like manner
and to as full an extent as the High Court in
England, and shall have the same regard as that
Court to international law and the comity of
nations.
Section 2 of The Colonial Courts of Admiralty (India) Act, 1891
reads as under:
2. APPOINTMENT OF COLONIAL COURTS OF ADMIRALTY:
The following Courts of unlimited civil
jurisdiction are hereby declared to be Colonial
Courts of Admiralty, namely:-
(1) the High Court of Judicature at
Fort William in Bengal;
(2) the High Court of Judicature at
Madras, and
(3) the High Court of Judicature at
Bombay."
Section 22(1) of Supreme Court of Judicature (Consolidation) Act,
1925 reads thus:
"22. ADMIRALTY JURISDICTION OF HIGH COURT: (1)
The High Court shall, in relation to admiralty
matters, have the following jurisdiction (in
this Act referred to as "admiralty
jurisdiction") that is to say -
(a) Jurisdiction to hear and determine any of
the following questions or claims:
*
(viii) Any claim by a seaman of a ship for
wages earned by him on board the ship,
whether due under a special contract or
otherwise, and any claim by the master
of a ship for wages earned by him on
board the ship and for disbursements
made by him on account of the ship;
(ix) Any claim in respect of a mortgage of
any ship, being a mortgage duly
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registered in accordance with the
provisions of the Merchant Shipping
Acts, 1894 to 1923, or in respect of
any mortgage of a ship which is, or the
proceeds whereof are, under the arrest
of the court;"
(x) Any claim for building, equipping or
repairing a ship, if at the time of the
institution of the proceedings the ship
is, or the proceeds thereof are, under
the arrest of the court."
Articles 1(k) and 2 of the 1952 Brussels Convention are as under:
"(1) "Maritime Claim" means a claim arising
out of one or more of the following:
*
(k) goods or materials wherever supplied to
a ship for her operation or
maintenance;
2. A ship flying the flag of one of the
Contracting States may be arrested in the
jurisdiction of any of the Contracting States in
respect of any maritime claim, but in respect of
no other claim; but nothing in this Convention
shall be deemed to extend or restrict any right
or powers vested in any Governments or their
Departments, Public Authorities, or Dock or
Harbour Authorities under their existing
domestic laws or regulations to arrest, detain
or otherwise prevent the sailing of vessels
within their jurisdiction."
HISTORY OF JURISDICTION OF THE HIGH COURT :
The jurisdiction of the High Court of Admiralty in England used to
be exercised in rem in such matters as from their very nature would give
rise to a maritime lien - e.g. collision, salvage, bottomry. The
jurisdiction of the High Court of Admiralty in England was, however,
extended to cover matters in respect of which there was no maritime
lien, i.e., necessaries supplied to a foreign ship. In terms of Section
6 of the Admiralty Act, 1861, the High Court of Admiralty was empowered
to assume jurisdiction over foreign ships in respect of claims to cargo
carried into any port in England or Wales. By reason of Judicature Act
of 1873, the jurisdiction of the High Court of Justice resulted in a
fusion: of admiralty law, common law and equity. The limit of the
jurisdiction of the Admiralty court in terms of Section 6 of the 1861
Act was discarded by the Administration of Justice Act, 1920 and the
jurisdiction of the High Court thereby was extended to (a) any claim
arising out of an agreement relating to the use or hire of a ship; (b)
any claim relating to the carriage of goods in any ship; and (c) any
claim in tort in respect of goods carried in any ship.
The admiralty jurisdiction of the High Court was further
consolidated by the Supreme Court of Judicature (Consolidation) Act,
1925 so as to include various matters such as any claim "for damage
done by a ship", and claim ’arising out of an agreement relating to the
use or hire of a ship’; or ’relating to the carriage of goods in a
ship’; or "in tort in respect of goods carried in a ship".
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The admiralty jurisdiction of the High Court was further widened
by the Administration of Justice Act, 1956 so as to include not only the
claims specified under Section 1(i) of Part I but also any other
jurisdiction which either was vested in the High Court of Admiralty
immediately before the date of commencement of the Supreme Court of
Judicature Act, 1873 (i.e. November 1, 1875) or is conferred by or under
an Act which came into operation on or after that date on the High Court
as being a court with admiralty jurisdiction and any other jurisdiction
connected with ships vested in the High Court apart from this section
which is for the time being assigned by rules of court to the Probate,
Divorce and Admiralty Division.
Sub-Section (4) of Section 1 removed the restriction based on the
ownership of the ship. By reason of Clauses (d) (g) and (h) of the said
Section the jurisdiction in regard to question or claims specified under
Section 1(i) included any claim for loss of or damage to goods carried
in a ship, any claim arising out of any agreement relating to the
carriage of goods in a ship or to the use or hire of a ship.
In the course of time the jurisdiction of the High Courts vested
in all the divisions alike. The Indian High Courts after independence
exercise the same jurisdiction.
NECESSARIES - AS A MARITIME CLAIM:
The concept "as to claims for necessaries" is specified under
Section 5 of the Admiralty Court Act, 1861, which provides for the
jurisdiction of High Court as regard "Necessaries supplied to any ship
elsewhere than in the port to which the ship belongs, unless it is shown
to the satisfaction of the court that at the time of institution of the
cause an owner or part owner of the ship is domiciled in England or
Wales".
The term "necessaries" had not been defined in the Act of 1861.
It was given a meaning by judicial pronouncements.
It stands accepted that having regard to the legislative and
executive policy, England and Wales never considered the arrears of
insurance premium as a ’necessary’. The Courts of England further
maintained a distinction between a maritime claim and maritime lien.
The decisions cited by Mr. Bharucha go to show that the English Courts
proceeded on the premise that for the purpose of considering as to
whether any necessary has been supplied to a ship or not must have a
sufficient and direct connection with the operation of the ship. It
held that unpaid insurance premium is not a maritime claim as it is not
needed to keep it going. [See Queen Vs. Judge of the City of London
Court (supra), Heinrich Bjorn (supra), The Andre Theodore (supra), The
Aifanourious (supra). The English Courts, thus, refused to put a wide
construction on that term.
A similar view was also adopted by an Australian High Court in
Gould Vs. Cornhill Insurance Co. Ltd. [1 DLR 4th Ed. 183].
In The Riga [(1869-72) L.R. 3 A&E 516], it is stated:
"The definition of the term
"necessaries" given by Lord Tenterden in
Webster v. Seekamp (4 B. & Ald. 352) adopted and
applied in proceedings in Admiralty. Semble,
there is no distinction between necessaries for
the ship and necessaries for the voyage."
In The Edinburgh Castle [(1999) Vol. 2 Lloyd’s Law Reports 362],
it has been held:
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"To address these concerns, Mr. Charkham
helpfully invited my attention to a number of the
authorities and to such discussion as there is on
s.20(2)(m) and its predecessors. Taking the matter
very shortly, for present purposes, the following
propositions emerge:
1. The words "in respect of" are wide words which
should not be unduly restricted: The Kommunar,
[1997] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 1, at p.5.
2. Section 20(2)(m), which is derived from the
equivalent provision in the Administration of
Justice Act, 1956, contains a jurisdiction which
is no narrower than the predecessor jurisdiction
in respect of claims for "necessaries": The
Fairport (No. 5), [1967] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 162; The
Kommunar, sup.
3. No distinction is to be drawn:
...between necessaries for the ship and
necessaries for the voyage, and all things
reasonably requisite for the particular
adventure on which the ship is bound are
comprised in this category. [Roscoe, The
Admiralty Jurisdiction and Practice, 5th ed., at
p. 203: The Riga (1872) L.R. 3 Ad. & Ecc. 516].
4. The jurisdiction extends to the provision of
services: The Equator, (1921) 9 L1.L.Re. 1: The
Fairport (No. 5), sup.
In the light of these propositions, I am
satisfied that the plaintiffs bring their claims
within s. 20(2)(m). Provisions for the passengers
were "necessaries" for the particular adventure on
which this passenger vessel was engaged. The
provision of services is capable of coming within the
sub-section and does so here, given the nature of the
services provided. I should mention that I was
referred in addition to The River Rima, [1988] 2
Lloyd’s Rep. 193 (H.L.) and [1987] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 106
(C.A.) but, as I understand it, nothing said there
precludes my decision in favour of the plaintiffs on
the facts of this case."
In Nore Challenger and Nore Commander [(2001) Vol. 2 Lloyd’s Law
Reports 103] the claim relating to supply of crew was held to be
"necessary" stating:
"Before considering whether the concept of
necessaries encompasses the provision or supply
of crew, it is important to bear in mind that it
has long been established that no distinction
need be drawn between the supply of necessaries
and the payment for such supply."
Identical view has been taken by a Court of Durban in M.V. Emerald
Transporter [1985 2 SALR 448] with reference to the provisions contained
in Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation Act 105 of 1983 wherein it was held
that services which are insured solely to the benefit of the ship owner
would not be classed as necessaries. The said decision was, however,
rendered in the context of ranking of claims against a fund comprising
of sale proceeds of the vessel M.V. Emerald Transporter.
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The House of Lords in The River Rima (supra) considered the
provisions of Article 1(1)(k) of the 1952 Brussels Arrest Convention
incorporating "goods or materials wherever supplied to a ship for her
operation or maintenance" as a maritime claim. Having regard to the
provisions contained in Section 6 of Admiralty Court Act, 1840 and
Section 5 of Admiralty Court Act, 1861 it was held:
"In other words, what is now called a claim in
respect of goods or materials supplied to a ship
for her operation or maintenance is the
equivalent of what used to be called a claim for
necessaries, but without the restrictions which
formerly applied to such a claim."
(Emphasis Supplied)
The Singapore High Court also in Golden Petroleum (1994 1 SLR 92)
considered the expression "goods supplied to a ship for her operation
and maintenance" in the following terms:
"In my opinion, bunker oil supplied to the ship
for sale to other ships could not be conceived
as goods supplied for her operation. The phrase
’operation of the ship’ should not be equated
with the business activities of the shipowner
and the section as enacted could not cover goods
which are loaded onto two ship only to be
unloaded or disposed of soon thereafter by
sale."
It appears that the matter is pending in appeal.
Yet again in Gatoil International (supra), it was held:
"An agreement for the cancellation of a contract
for the carriage of goods in a ship or for the
use or hire of a ship would, I think, show a
sufficiently direct connection. It is
unnecessary to speculate what other cases might
be covered. Each case would require to be
decided on its own facts. As regards the
contract of insurance founded on in the instant
appeal, I am of opinion that it is not connected
with the carriage of goods in a ship in a
sufficiently direct sense to be capable of
coming within para (e)."
The question, however, is as to whether having regard to the
changed situation unpaid insurance premium should be held to be a
commercial necessity. With a view to answer the question it is
necessary to consider as to whether a failure to insure the security is
a matter which would have a bearing upon the security of the ship.
Whether the provisions of insurance is to be considered to be a
service? A further question which may arise is as to whether such
service is to the ship or not ?
INSURANCE COVERS - EXTENT OF:
The law of marine insurance rested almost entirely on common law.
Only a few isolated points were dealt with by statute. Although, there
may be a plethora of authority on some points, the decisions may be
meagre on others. The interpretative changes made from time to time
turned upon new commercial conditions, the old ones having become
obsolete. Some countries enacted and codified marine laws while many
did not. With the passage of time, the scope and ambit of the contracts
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of insurance increased not only having regard to the experience gathered
by the contracting parties but also by the legislators and the Court. A
lot of amendments in the statutes as also interpretive changes took
place. The decisions rendered by different courts on marine insurance
law even frequently apply to non-marine insurance. With the increase in
marine traffic, the insurance law also developed and new varieties of
insurance covers came into being. There has been a considerable
expansion of the practice of insurance against various forums of legal
liabilities which the assured may incur to the third parties.
P&I mutual insurances cover the liabilities of assured shipowner
incurred to third parties. In Modern Admiralty Law by Aleka Mandaraka-
Sheppard at page 642, it is stated:
"P&I mutual insurance (P&I associations) cover
the liabilities of their assured shipowner
incurred to third parties, which include cargo
claims, pollution liabilities, damage to
harbours, piers, etc., and personal injury or
loss of life claims, which are all excluded from
the RDC clause. In addition the P&I association
insures the remaining one-fourth of the assured’
liability under the RDC clause. Legal costs in
defending such claims are covered as well."
The title of a claimant to sue the defendant as regard cargo claim
enquiry has been stated in Shipping Law by Simon Baughen, Second Edition
at page 16-17 in the following terms:
"Does the claimant have title to sue the
defendant?
’Title to sue’ means the claimant’s right to sue
the defendant, be it in contract, tort or
bailment, in respect of the transit losses it
will have borne as a buyer taking delivery at
the end of a chain of sale contracts. If the
claimant has insured the goods and has been
indemnified, then the action may be brought in
its name by its insurers under the process of
subrogation.
The defendant will usually be the
shipowner, but may also be a charterer or a
freight forwarder who has contracted as carrier.
If an inaccurate bill of lading is signed, the
defendant could also be the party who actually
signed the bill of lading. The shipowner’s
liability in respect of cargo claims will
generally be covered by liability insurance,
known as ’P&I’ (protection and indemnity)
insurance. Shipowners will not be covered in
respect of claims arising out of deviation,
misdelivery and the issuing of a ’clean’ bill of
lading for goods that were damaged prior to
loading."
Apart from P&I club, there exists the Inter club Agreement (ICA).
In Shipping Law by Simon Baughen, at page 183, it is stated :
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"Another very common clause in time charters is
the ’Inter-Club Agreement’ (ICA). The agreement
began as an agreement between the P&I Clubs as
to how they would recommend settlement of cargo
claims as between shipowners and charterers
where the NYPE form time charter is used. It is
now common for the agreement to be specifically
incorporated into the time charter. Indeed the
NYPE 1993 form contains a printed cl 27 to this
effect."
The Special Compensation P&I Club Clause (the SCOPIC clause)
enumerated from Article 14 remuneration after The Nagasaki Spirit, in
1999 as a result of discontent by salvors. Although this provision
affected only the salvor and the shipowner, the international groups of
P&I Clubs have agreed a code of conduct giving their backing to the
clause whenever a ship enters with the International Group is salved by
a member of the International Salve Union. The salient features of the
claim which received clarificatory amendment in 2000 are as under:
"For the clause to operate it needs to be
specifically incorporated into an LOF contract,
of whatever form. LOF 2000 contains a box to be
ticked if the parties agree to the incorporation
of the SCOPIC clause. If the clause is
incorporated it then needs to be invoked by
salvor. This can be done even if there is no
threat to the environment. Invoking the clause
completely replaces the right of the salvor to
claim under Art. 14, even in respect of services
performed before the invocation of the clause.
The provisions of Art. 14(5) and (6), however,
continue to remain effective. Within two days
of the clause being invoked, cl 3 obliges the
shipowner to put up security for the salvor’s
claim under the clause in the amount of
US$3,000,000. If the shipowner fails to do so,
cl 4 entitles the salvor to withdraw from the
SCOPIC clause, provided the security is still
outstanding at the date of withdrawal.
Clause 5 provides that SCOPIC remuneration is to
be calculated by reference to an agreed tariff
of rates that are profitable to salvors,
calculated by reference to the horsepower of the
salvage tug/s employed. It also covers the
salvor’s out of pocket expenses. An uplift of
25% is applied to both these heads of claim.
Clause 6 provides that SCOPIC remuneration is
payable only in the event that it exceeds the
amount of the award under Art 13. To deter
salvors from invoking SCOPIC too readily, cl 7
provides that in the event of SCOPIC
remuneration falling below the amount of the Art
13 award, that award shall be discounted by 25%
of the difference between the award and the
SCOPIC remuneration. Thus, where the Art 13
award is for $1,000,000 and the SCOPIC
remuneration is only $600,000, the Art 13 award
will be reduced by $100,000 being 25% of the
difference between the two sums, giving the
salvor a net award of $900,000.
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The SCOPIC clause also provides for the
termination of both the SCOPIC provisions and
the LOF in two situations. First, the salvor
can terminate if the cost of its services less
any SCOPIC remunerations exceeds the value of
the salved property. Secondly, the shipowner
can terminate by giving five days’ notice.
These termination provisions do not apply if the
contractor is restrained from demobilizing its
equipment by a public body with jurisdiction
over the area where the services are being
performed. Once the clause has been invoked,
the shipowner is entitled to appoint a Special
Casualty Representative (SCR) to monitor the
salvage services. The SCR does not impinge on
the authority of the salvage master but does
have the right to be kept fully informed about
the progress of the salvage operations. This
provision improves the flow of information back
to the P&I Club whose interests will ultimately
be affected by the salvage services."
[See Shipping Law by Simon Baughen - page 293]
NECESSITY OF INSURANCE COVER:
The necessity of a P&I cover is in commercial expediency. All P&I
clubs are non-profit making companies. The owner upon entering the ship
becomes the member of the P&I club and he not only pays membership fee
but undertakes to pay contribution towards the losses incurred by other
members of the club which are payable by the company. A new concept has
come into being in terms whereof a reciprocal system has been evolved to
the effect that each member is cast under a duty to refund the damage
suffered by any one of them and pay, on mutual basis, each other’s
claim. Thus, the members play a dual role of both beneficiary and
benefactor. We have noticed the concept of such clubs. The Indian
statutes operating in the field are pointer to the fact that such
insurance has become more and more commercially expedient. No ship
having regard to the ramification in international law can sail without
such insurance. Apart from the 1952 Brussels Arrest Convention, the
Merchant Shipping (Oil) Pollution Act, 1961 makes insurance compulsory.
As would be noticed hereinafter, P&I insurance cover to call at
major ports in India is now a statutory requirement.
CHANGING SCENARIO :
The advancement in law would be evident from the 1999 Arrest
Convention whereby significant changes to the law relating to in rem
claims and arrest has been made. Pursuant to Article 14 of the 1999
Arrest Convention, such changes would come into force six months after
ratification by the 10th State.
The countries which have ratified the Convention are as follows:
"Algeria, Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Belgium,
Belize, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central
African Republic, Comoros, Congo, Costa Rica,
Ctte d’Ivoire, Croatia, Cuba, Denmark, Djibouti,
Dominica, Republic of, Egypt, Fiji, Finland,
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France, Overseas Territories, Gabon, Germany,
Greece, Grenada, Guyana, Guinea, Haiti, Haute-
Volta, Holy, Seat, Ireland, Italy, Khmere
Republic, Kiribati, Latvia, Luxembourg,
Madagascar, Marocco, Mauritania, Mauritius,
Netherlands, Niger, Nigeria, North Borneo,
Norway, Paraguay, Poland, Portugal, Romania, St.
Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the
Grenadines, Sarawak, Senegal, Seychelles,
Slovenia, Solomon Islands, Spain, Sudan, Sweden,
Switzerland, Syrian Arabic Republic, Tchad,
Togo, Tonga, Turks Isles and Caicos, Tuvalu,
United Kingdom of Great Britain, and Northern
Ireland, United Kingdom (Overseas Territories),
Gibraltar, Hong-Kong (1), British Virgin
Islands, Bermuda, Anguilla, Caiman Islands,
Montserrat, St. Helena, Guernsey, Falkland
Islands and dependencies, Zaire."
Article 1 of the Convention contemplates an expansion of existing
categories of arrestable claims under the following headings, some of
which, namely, heading (c) and (d) are already reflected in Section
20(2) of the Supreme Court Act, 1981:
(a) this refers to ’loss or damage caused by the operation of the
ship’ rather than ’damage done by a ship’ and would encompass
claims for pure economic loss...
(c) this extends the category of salvage to include claims arising
from salvage agreements or special compensation under Art. 14
of the 1989 Salvage Convention;
(d) this covers damage to environment, including threatened
damage...
(l) this extends the scope of claims in respect of supply of goods
and materials to a ship to cover ’provisions, bunkers,
equipment (including containers) supplied or services rendered
to the ship for its operation, management, preservation or
maintenance’;
(m) this extends the scope of claims against ships by shipyards to
cover ’construction, reconstruction, repair, converting or
equipping of the ship’...
(o) this extends the scope of claims in respect of port dues, and
also in respect of wages which will now cover repatriation
costs and social insurance contributions...
(u) this extends the scope of claims in respect of mortgages by
removing the reference to a registered or registrable mortgage,
thereby encompassing unregistered mortgages...
The purpose of the 1952 Convention was to restrict the
possibilities of arrest with regard to seagoing vessels flying the flag
of a contracting State. Such an arrest was allowed for maritime claims
against the vessel or against the sister ship belonging to the same
owners. What would be the maritime claim is specified in Article 1 of
the Convention. Other claims can only be secured if the vessel’s home
port is situated in a non-contracting State.
Apart from those restrictions resulting from the Convention, all
kinds of claims can be secured by an arrest and there is no need to
prove a connection with the operation of the vessel. As for example, a
guarantee given by the owners for a subsidiary company or other
principal debtor is as suitable as a claim resulting from the purchase
of the ship or any other goods by the owners. However, in terms of
Article 1(k) of the Convention claims for "goods or materials" supplied
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to a ship for her operation or maintenance are acknowledged as maritime
claims.
What was expressly excluded in 1952 convention has been included
in 1999 convention. The restrictions imposed under 1952 convention as
regard ’Maritime claim’ to operation of ship and maintenance thereof
have been removed.
In Kapila Hingorani Vs. State of Bihar [JT 2003 (5) SC 1] this
Court observed:
"Justice Holmes expressed the following view in
Missouri vs. Holland [252 US 416 (433)] :
"When we are dealing with words that also are a
constituent act, like the Constitution of the
United States, we must realise that they have
called into life a being the development of
which could not have been foreseen completely by
the most gifted of its begetters. It was enough
for them to realise or to hope that they had
created an organism, it has taken a century and
has cost their successors must sweat and blood
to prove that they created a nation. The case
before us must be considered in the light of our
whole experience and not merely in that of what
was said a hundred years ago."
Justice Frankfurter elucidated the
interpretive role in "Some Reflections on the
Reading of Statutes" :
"There are varying shades of compulsion for
judges behind different words, differences that
are due to the words themselves, their setting
in a text, their setting in history. In short,
judges are not unfettered glossators. They are
under a special duty not to overemphasize the
episodic aspects of life and not to undervalue
its organic processes - its continuities and
relationships"
In Jagdish Saran and Others Vs. Union of
India [(1980) 2 SCC 768], it is stated:
"Law, constitutional law, is not an omnipotent
abstraction or distant idealization but a
principled, yet pragmatic, value-laden and
result-oriented, set of propositions applicable
to and conditioned by a concrete stage of social
development of the nation and aspirational
imperatives of the people. India Today - that is
the inarticulate major premise of our
constitutional law and life."
It is also well-settled that interpretation of
the Constitution of India or statutes would
change from time to time. Being a living organ,
it is ongoing and with the passage of time, law
must change. New rights may have to be found
out within the constitutional scheme. Horizons
of constitutional law are expanding."
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In the aforementioned judgment, this Court referred to a large
number of decisions for the purpose of interpreting the constitutional
provisions in the light of the international treaties and conventions.
Further more in John Vallamattom and Anr. Vs. Union of India [JT
2003 (6) SC 37] while referring to an amendment made in U.K. in relation
to a provision which was in pari materia with Section 118 of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925, this Court observed:
"...The constitutionality of a provision, it is
trite, will have to be judged keeping in view
the interpretive changes of the statute effected
by passage of time."
Referring to the changing scenario of the law having regard to the
declaration on the right to development adopted by the World Conference
on Human Rights and Article 18 of the United Nations Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights, 1966, it was held:
"It is trite that having regard to Article 13(1)
of the Constitution, the constitutionality of
the impugned legislation is required to be
considered on the basis of laws existing on
26.11.1950, but while doing so the court is not
precluded from taking into consideration the
subsequent events which have taken place
thereafter. It is further trite that that the
law although may be constitutional when enacted
but with passage of time the same may be held to
be unconstitutional in view of the changing
situation.
Justice Cardoze said :
"The law has its epochs of ebb and flow,
the flood tides are on us. The old order
may change yielding place to new; but the
transition is never an easy process".
Albert Campus stated :
"The wheel turns, history changes".
Stability and change are the two sides of
the same law-coin. In their pure form
they are antagonistic poles; without
stability the law becomes not a chart of
conduct, but a gare of chance: with only
stability the law is as the still waters
in which there is only stagnation and
death."
In any view of the matter even if a provision
was not unconstitutional on the day on which it
was enacted or the Constitution came into force,
by reason of facts emerging out thereafter, the
same may be rendered unconstitutional."
Yet again in Indian Handicrafts Emporium & Ors. Vs. Union of India
[2003 (6) SCALE 831] this Court considered the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) and applied the
principles of purposive constructions as also not only the Directive
Principles as contained in Part IV of the Constitution but also
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Fundamental Duties as contained in Part IVA thereof.
Referring to Motor General Traders and Another vs. State of Andhra
Pradesh and Others [(1984) 1 SCC 222], Rattan Arya and Others vs. State
of Tamil Nadu and Another [(1986) 3 SCC 385] and Synthetics and
Chemicals Ltd. and Others vs. State of U.P. and Others [(1990) 1 SCC
109], this Court held:
"There cannot be any doubt whatsoever that a law
which was at one point of time was
constitutional may be rendered unconstitutional
because of passage of time. We may note that
apart from the decisions cited by Mr. Sanghi,
recently a similar view has been taken in Kapila
Hingorani Vs. State of Bihar [JT 2003 (5) SC 1]
and John Vallamattom and Anr. Vs. Union of India
[JT 2003 (6) SC 37]."
It was, however, held that India being a sovereign country is not
obligated to make law only in terms of CITES. It may impose stricter
restrictions having regard to the local needs.
Legal history is a good guide for the purpose of appreciating the
legal development across the world particularly in the field of
international law, maritime law being a part of it. While interpreting
such a situation, one must take into consideration the flexibility in
law as has been highlighted by this Court in m.v. Al Quamar (supra)
wherein it was opined:
"43. The two decisions noted above in our view
deal with the situation amply after having
considered more or less the entire gamut of
judicial precedents. Barker, J’s judgment in the
New Zealand case ((1980) 1 NZLR 104 (NZSC)) very
lucidly sets out that the court has to approach
the modem problem with some amount of
flexibility as is now being faced in the modern
business trend. Flexibility is the virtue of the
law courts as Roscoe Pound puts it. The pedantic
approach of the law courts are no longer
existing by reason of the global change of
outlook in trade and commerce. The observations
of Barker, J. and the findings thereon in the
New Zealand case ((1980) 1 NZLR 104 (NZSC)) with
the longish narrations as above, depicts our
inclination to concur with the same, but since
issue is slightly different in the matter under
consideration, we, however, leave the issue
open, though the two decisions as above cannot
be doubted in any way whatsoever and we feel it
expedient to record that there exists sufficient
reasons and justification in the submission of
Mr. Desai as regards the invocation of
jurisdiction under Section 44-A of the Code upon
reliance on the two decisions of the New Zealand
and Australian Courts."
No statutory law in India operates in the field. Interpretative
changes, if any, must, thus be made having regard to the ever changing
global scenario.
This Court in M.V. Elisabeth (supra) observed that Indian statutes
lag behind any development of international law and further it had not
adopted the various conventions but opined that the provisions thereof
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having been made as a result of international unification and
development of the maritime laws of the world should be regarded as the
international common law or transnational law rooted in and evolved out
of the general principles of national laws, which, in the absence of any
specific statutory provisions can be adopted and adapted by courts to
supplement and complement national statutes on this subject.
This Court in M.V. Elisabeth (supra) observed:
"30. The Exchequer Court of Canada was
established by the Admiralty Act R. S. Canada,
1906, c. 141, as a Colonial Court of Admiralty.
It is not clear whether that Court was in its
jurisdiction comparable to the Indian High
Courts. Assuming that it was comparable at the
relevant time, and whatever be the relevance of
Yuri Maru (1927 AC 906 : 43 TLR 698) to courts
like the Exchequer Court of Canada, we see no
reason why the jurisdiction of Indian High
Courts, governed as they now are by the
Constitution of India, should in any way be
subjected to the jurisdictional fetters imposed
by the Privy Council in that decision. Legal
history is good guidance for the future, but to
surrender to the former is to lose the latter."
(Emphasis supplied)
(See paras 78 and 99 also)
It was further observed:
"89. All persons and things within the waters of
a State fall within its jurisdiction unless
specifically curtailed or regulated by rules of
international law. The power to arrest a foreign
vessel, while in the waters of a coastal State,
in respect of a maritime claims, wherever
arising, is a demonstrable manifestation and an
essential attribute of territorial sovereignty.
This power is recognised by several
international conventions (See the Conventions
referred to above. See also Nagendra Singh,
International Maritime Conventions, British
Shipping Laws, Vol. 4). These conventions
contain the unified rules of law drawn from
different legal systems. Although many of these
conventions have yet to be ratified by India,
they embody principles of law recognised by the
generality of maritime States, and can therefore
be regarded as part of our common law. The want
of ratification of these conventions is
apparently not because of any policy
disagreement, as is clear from active and
fruitful Indian participation in the formulation
of rules adopted by the conventions, but perhaps
because of other circumstances, such as lack of
an adequate and specialised machinery for
implementation of the various international
conventions by co-ordinating for the purpose the
Departments concerned of the Government. Such a
specialised body of legal and technical experts
can facilitate adoption of internationally
unified rules by national legislation. It is
appropriate that sufficient attention is paid to
this aspect of the matter by the authorities
concerned. Perhaps the Law Commission of India,
endowed as it ought to be with sufficient
authority, status and independence, as is the
position in England, can render valuable help in
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this regard. Delay in the adoption of
international conventions which are intended to
facilitate trade hinders the economic growth of
the nation."
(Emphasis supplied)
M.V. Elisabeth (supra) is an authority for the proposition that
the changing global scenario should be kept in mind having regard to the
fact that there does not exist any primary act touching the subject and
in absence of any domestic legislation to the contrary; if the 1952
Arrest Convention had been applied, although India was not a signatory
thereto, there is obviously no reason as to why the 1999 Arrest
Convention should not be applied.
Application of the 1999 convention in the process of interpretive
changes, however, would be subject to : (1) domestic law which may be
enacted by the Parliament; and (2) it should be applied only for
enforcement of a contract involving public law character.
It is not correct to contend as has been submitted by Mr. Bharucha
that this Court having regard to the decision in M.V. Elisabeth (supra)
must follow the law which is currently prevalent in UK and confine
itself only to the 1952 Arrest Convention into Indian Admiralty
Jurisprudence. The question is as to if the 1952 Arrest Convention had
been applied keeping in view the changing scenario why not the 1999
Arrest Convention also? A distinction must be borne in mind between a
jurisdiction exercised by the High Courts in India in terms of the
existing laws and the manner in which such jurisdiction can be
exercised. Once the Court opines that insurance is needed to keep the
ship going - it has to be construed as ’Necessaries’. The jurisdiction
of the Courts in India, in view of the decision of this Court in M.V.
Elisabeth (supra)is akin to the jurisdiction of the English Courts but
the same would not mean that the Indian High Courts are not free to take
a different view from those of the English Courts. As regard
application of a statute law the Indian High Courts would follow the
pre-independence statute but Indian Courts need not follow the judge-
made law.
M.V. Eligabeth defines the jurisdiction of the Court but does not
limit or restrict it.
Supply of necessaries is a maritime lien in U.S.A. in terms of the
relevant statute and has been classified in the category of subordinate
to the Preferred Ship Mortgage.
In Benedict on Admiralty, 6th Edn., Vol.1, p. 22, it has been
stated :
"Whenever a debt of a maritime nature is by law,
no matter what law, or by contract, a lien upon
the vessel, the vessel may be proceeded against
in rem. The maritime lien, whether created by
actual hypothecation or by implication or
operation of law, may be enforced in the
admiralty."
It is true that this Court is not bound by the American decisions.
The American decisions have merely a persuasive value but this Court
would not hesitate in borrowing the principles if the same is in
consonance with the scheme of Indian law keeping in view the changing
global scenario. Global changes and outlook in trade and commerce could
be a relevant factor. With the change of time; from narrow and pedantic
approach, the Court may resort to broad and liberal interpretation.
What was not considered to be a necessity a century back, may be held to
be so now.
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INDIAN STATUTES OPERATING IN THE FIELD:
Section 352 N of the Indian Merchant Shipping Act, 1958 makes such
an insurance compulsory which reads as under:
"352-N. Compulsory insurance or other financial
guarantee. - (1) The owner of every Indian ship
which carries 2000 tons or more oil in bulk as
cargo, shall, in respect of such ship, maintain an
insurance or other financial security for an amount
equivalent to -
(a) one hundred and thirty-three Special
Drawing Rights for each ton of the ship’s
tonnage; or
(b) fourteen million Special Drawing Rights,
whichever is lower.
The Inland Vessels Act requires a compulsory third party risk
insurance cover and the standard format charter parties mostly have
printed clauses making it mandatory for a vessel to have a valid
protection and indemnity cover for want of which such vessels are not
accepted for charter.
Chapter IV of the Inland Vessels Act provides for a compulsory
insurance in terms whereof Chapter VIII of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939
has been incorporated by reference.
This Court while considering the question of third party insurance
in Motor Vehicles has noticed the development of law from the Road
Traffic Act, 1930 and Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 to Motor Vehicles Act,
1988 and the amendments carried out therein from time to time. [See
National Insurance Co. Ltd., Chandigarh vs. Nicolletta Rohtagi and
Others - (2002) 7 SCC 456].
The Multimodal Transportation of Goods (Amendment) Act 2000 inter
alia provides for responsibilities and liabilities of the multimodal
transport operator. By reason of Act 44 of 2000 a proviso has been
added. Section 5 of the said Act amends Section 7 of the Principal Act
of 1993 and reads as under:
"5. In Section 7 of the principal Act, in sub-
section (1), the following proviso shall be
inserted, namely:-
"Provided that the multimodal transport
operator shall issue the multimodal
transport document only after obtaining
and during the subsistence of a valid
insurance cover."
CIRCULARS:
The insurance association has issued a circular dated 20th
February, 2001 which is to the following effect:
"TO THE MEMBERS
Dear Sirs
NEW COMPULSORY INSURANCE REQUIREMENTS IN
AUSTRALIAN WATERS
Members should be aware that new Compulsory
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Insurance requirements for non tank vessels have
come into force in Australia. Details are
available at the website of the AMSA -
http:/www.amsa.gov.au.
From 6th April 2001 ships of 400gt or more
(excluding tankers covered by CLC Certificates)
will be required to carry a "relevant insurance
certificate" containing the following
information:
a) the name of the ship
b) the name of the ship’s owner
c) the name and address of the insurer
d) the commencement date of the insurance
e) the amount of cover which must in any
event not be less than the limit of
liability under the 1976 Limitation
Convention.
The "relevant insurance certificate" will need
to be produced during Port State Control
inspections and by the Australian Customs
Service on entering or leaving Australian ports.
A six months period of grace will be allowed
before full enforcement action is undertaken;
ships without sufficient documentation on board
will be given a warning until 5th September,
2001. Thereafter ships will be detained until
the requirement documentation is produced.
AMSA officials have indicated that although the
Notice requires that the amount of cover be set
out in the Certificate of Entry it will be
assumed if a dollar amount is not set out that
Club cover in any event extends at least to the
cover provided under the 1976 Convention as
amended.
AMSA officials have also indicated that if a
vessel does not carry any original certificate
of Entry they will be satisfied with the
provision of a photocopy on the vessel’s first
visit. However on the second and subsequent
visits vessels will be expected to carry an
original Certificate of Entry.
Please contact the Club if you need further
information.
Yours faithfully,
THOMAS MILLER (BERMUDA) LTD."
A circular has also been issued by the Insurance Association on
26.07.2000 regarding new legislation in U.S.A. (Alaska) which is to the
following effect:
"26 July 2000
TO ALL MEMBERS
Dear Sirs
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OIL POLLUTION: UNITED STATES
NEW LEGISLATION IN ALASKA FOR NON-TANK VESSELS
FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY REQUIREMENTS: DRAFT
REGULATIONS
In May 2000 the State of Alaska followed the
recent example of California in passing
legislation requiring non-tank self-propelled
vessels operating in Alaskan waters and
exceeding 400 gt to demonstrate proof of
financial responsibility for oil spills
occurring in Alaskan waters. The effective date
of the Financial Responsibility Act is 1
September 2000.
Proof of financial responsibility must be
established for non-tank vessels operating in
Alaskan waters in the following amounts:
(a) For vessels carrying predominately
persistent product, $300 per incident
for each barrel of oil storage
capacity, or $5,000,000, whichever is
greater.
(b) For vessels carrying predominately non-
persistent product, $100 per incident
for each barrel of oil storage
capacity, or $1,000,000, whichever is
greater.
The Act applies to non-tank vessels over 400 gt
which by definition covers self-propelled
vessels including commercial fishing vessels,
passenger and cargo vessels. Barges are
excluded, as are public vessels unless "engaged
in commerce".
The Alaska Department of Environmental
Conservation (ADEC) have proposed draft
regulations to implement the financial
responsibility requirements. ADEC predicts that
their regulations will not become final until
September or early October 2000 but the
effective date for the new law remains 1
September 2000. A summary of the draft
regulations is set out below:
Interim applications and Documentation for Proof
of Financial Responsibility
An interim application procedure is set out in
ADEC’s letter of 17 July 2000, which is
attached. Owners or operators of non-tank
vessels covered by the new law must submit a
completed application and documentation of
financial responsibility in the appropriate
dollar amount not later than 31 August 2000.
Acceptable financial responsibility may include
the following:
a. Affidavit of self-insurance and most
recent audited financial statement;
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b. Insurance certificate and insurance
policy;
c. Surety bond;
d. Financial guarantee, accompanied by
guarantor’s evidence of self insurance;
e. Letter of credit;
f. Certificate of entry evidencing
coverage by a Protection and Indemnity
Club; or
g. Certificate of deposit with assignment
of negotiable interest.
Interim Approval
A completed application form and appropriate
documentation evidencing proof of financial
responsibility which is submitted by 31 August
2000 will be deemed approved by ADEC for
purposes of meeting the 1 September 2000
deadline. Following adoption of final
regulations, ADEC will review each application
to ensure that it meets the requirements of the
statute and regulations. A formal approval will
be given to those vessels which qualify, and
non-qualifying applicants will be given 30 days
to submit additional information as requested by
the Department.
Application Form
A copy of ADEC’s application form is attached.
In Section (c), paragraph 1(b), proof of
financial responsibility by entry in a P&I Club
must include a Certificate of Entry and must
include "all addenda pertaining to the amount
and applicability of oil pollution cover and
amount of deductibles."
Deductibles
With respect of deductibles, paragraph 1(c) of
the application asks for proof of financial
responsibility for any deductible, such as a
certificate of deposit, or other "financial
information." It thus appears that ADEC will
require some evidence of financial
responsibility for any deductible as is
presently required by ADEC’s draft regulations.
ADEC is presently considering whether to allow
an interim application which does not have
separate proof of financial responsibility for a
deductible. However, at this juncture Owners
and operators with insurance deductibles should
probably plan to submit separate proof of
financial responsibility for any deductible.
There are likely to be further developments on
this issue and Members will be kept advised.
The Managers intend to issue a further circular
when these regulations become final.
In the meantime, Members may contact Mr. Douglas
R Davis of the Association’s correspondents at
Anchorage, Alaska:
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Kessal Young & Logan, Tel: +1(0)907 279
9696, Fax: +1(0)907 279 4239 for further
assistance. Mr. Davis has filed submissions to
ADEC on behalf of the International Group in
relation to the draft regulations, and can
assist Members with applications.
Yours faithfully
A BILBOUGH & CO. LTD
(MANAGERS)"
The major ports in India, namely, Mumbai and Kolkata had issued
circulars which are as under:
"MUMBAI PORT TRUST
Deputy Conservator’s Office
Port House, 1st Floor
Shoorji Vallabhadas Marg
Mumbai - 400 001
No. DC/C.SH/2/4455 8th August, 1996
CIRCULAR
To
Ship Owners/Stevedores/Vessel Agents
The Secretary
Bombay & Nhave/Sheve Ship-Intermodel
Agents Association
3, Rex Chambers, Ground Floor
Valchand Hirachand Marg
Ballard Estate, Mumbai - 400 001
The Secretary
The Bombay Stevedores Association Ltd.,
Janmabhoomi Chambers, 2nd Floor,
Valchand Hirachand Marg,
Ballard Estate, Mumbai - 400 001
Subsequent to the Circular Nos. DC/C-
SH/7200 dated 4th October, 1995 and DC/C-
SH/2/3661 dated 9th July, 1996 and in view of
recent experience gathered from the storm which
hit the harbour on 18th and 19th June, 1996. It
has been decided that vessels which do not
possess valid P&I club cover or suitable
Insurance Cover will not be decked. The
intention of the Port is to eliminate all sub-
standard vessels or ships without insurance
cover, making Mumbai a port of call, because a
mishap to such a vessel will render the port
liable for expenses of wreck removal or other
damages caused.
2. Therefore, notice is hereby given that
from 1st November, 1996, ships, which do not
possess valued insurance cover will not be given
an anchorage berth in the Mumbai Port for cargo
work or for any other purpose, this notice
period is given so that the owners, agents and
shippers proposing to load cargo have sufficient
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time to ensure that such cargoes will be loaded
on duly protected ships.
Sd/-
Deputy Conservators
CALCUTTA PORT TRUST
HARBOUR MASTER (PORT)’S OFFICE
CIRCULAR NO. 10 DATED 26.6.2001
To
All Shipping Agents
To safeguard Port interest for damage cost
of repairs due marine accident or otherwise, it
is mandatory for the Agents to declare along
with Berthing Application the details of P&I
Club Coverage including period of validity and a
declaration that insurance provides
comprehensive coverage, inter alia, the
following risks:
1) 3rd party liability claims
2) Claims arising out of injury/ death etc.
3) Claims arising out of damage to port
properties
4) Claims against environmental damage owing
to pollution caused by the ship or its personnel
5) Removal of the wreck comprehensively
The above details required to be submitted
along with Berthing application to Harbour
Master (River) & Harbour Master (*Port).
Sd/-
(D.K. Rao)
Harbour Master (Port)
Copy to:
DMD/TMN/FA&CAO/Secretary/H.M.(R)"
Cochin Port Trust had also been contemplating to issue such
circular.
It may be true that some ports have not issued such circulars but
from a bare perusal of the circulars as referred to hereinbefore, it
would appear that such insurance cover has been considered to be a
service having regard to the cover extended to oil spill, damage to
port, salvage operation, etc.
The circulars issued by the Port Trusts may not be determinative
but there cannot be any doubt whatsoever the same would also be a
relevant factor.
The ’Vessel’ is also not correct in its submission that the ports
cannot take any direct action against the insurers. The circulars
issued are pointers to the fact that development of law in other
countries is being taken note of for the purpose of taking insurance
cover in different fields as a compulsive measure.
A DRIFT IN THE CONCEPT?
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Whether arrears of insurance premium would come within the term
"necessaries" is the core question involved in these appeals. The term
has not been statutorily defined.
The term ’necessaries’ as defined in Black’s Law Dictionary reads
as under:
"What constitutes "necessaries" for which an
admiralty lien will attach depends upon what is
reasonably needed in the ship’s business, regard
being had to the character of the voyage and the
employment in which the vessel is being used."
In Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, the term ’necessaries’ has inter alia
been defined as follows:
"The term necessaries is not confined merely to
what is requisite barely to support life, but
includes many of the conveniences of refined
society.
A racing bicycle was held a necessary for an
apprentice earning 21s. a week and living with
his parents; 78 L.T. 296"
In The Canadian Law Dictionary, the term ’necessaries’ has been
defined as follows:
"In the case of ships, the term denotes whatever
is fit and proper for the service on which the
ship is engaged, whatever the owner of that
vessel, as a prudent man would have ordered if
present at the time. Victoria Machinery Depot
Co. Ltd. v. The ’Canada’ and the ’Triumph’,
(1913) 15 Ex.C.R. 136, 14 D.L.R. 318."
In Ballentine’s Law Dictionary, the term ’necessaries’ has been
defined as follows:
"Under the maritime law permitting the master of
a ship to pledge the owner’s credit for
necessaries, the word does not import absolute
necessity, but the circumstances must be such
that a reasonable prudent owner, present, would
have authorized the expenditures, and it is
usually sufficient if they are reasonably fit
and proper, having regard to the exigencies and
requirements of the ship, for the port where she
is lying and the voyage on which she is bound.
48 Am J1st Ship ’ 133."
In 70 American Jurisprudence 2d, at page 478, it is stated:
"The term "necessary" in this connection does
not mean indispensable to the safety of the
vessel and crew; necessaries which will create a
lien upon the ship are such as are reasonably
fit and proper for her under the circumstances,
and not merely such as are absolutely
indispensable for her safety or the
accomplishment of the voyage. Whatever a
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prudent owner, if present, would be supposed to
have authorized, the master may order, and for
such expenditures the vessel will be held
responsible."
We may further notice that in Modern Admiralty Law by Aleka
Mandaraka-Sheppard at page 52, it is stated:
"However, the decision of the Scottish Court of
Session in The Aifanourios, mentioned above,
shattered the hopes of P&I clubs. It took 19
years for the wheel to turn round and so to
include such claims in the list of claims
provided by the new Arrest Convention 1999. The
new Arrest Convention 1999 has incorporated in
the list of maritime claims for insurance
premiums and brokerage, including claims by a
P&I club for unpaid calls. Such claims will
qualify for an arrest of a ship to be made once
the Convention comes into force, or is enacted
by the UK."
In Principles of Maritime Law by Susan Hodges and Christopher Hill
at page 364 it is stated:
"Failure to insure the ship: The authorities of
Laming v. Seater, The Heather Bell, and Law
Guarantee and Trust Society v. Russian Bank for
Foreign Trade and others have all confirmed that
a failure to insure the security is a matter
which would have a bearing upon the security of
the ship. In such an event, the mortgagee may
enter into possession in order to make the ship
available as security for the debt. It is to be
noted that, in the last two cases, the court had
also pointed out that a failure to insure the
vessel (though it may constitute the basis of a
right for the mortgagee to take possession) is
not itself a legitimate ground for interfering
with the performance of the charterparty."
It is interesting to note that in P&I clubs - Law and Practice by
Steven J. Hazelwood, it is stated:
"The defendant shipowners challenged the
competence of the court to deal with the action
as an action in rem. The catalogue of claims
which entitle a claimant to proceed with an
action in rem in the courts of Scotland are
stated in section 47(2) of the Administration of
Justice Act 1956 which provides, inter alia:
"This section applies to any claim arising out
of one or more of the following, that is to say
...(d) any agreement relating to the use or hire
of any ship whether by charter or otherwise;"."
The learned author, however, noticed the shortcomings in the
statutes operating in United Kingdom and made a prophecy to the effect
that contract of maritime insurance may be included in the list of claim
giving the right of arrest in the following terms:
"The current position is, therefore, that claims
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arising out of contracts of marine insurance are
not claims which entitle a claimant to proceed
by way of action in rem and claimants in respect
of P.&I. Club membership are in no better
position than those claiming in respect of
traditional hull and cargo insurance.
In this context there is one respect in which
the insurance cover offered by P.&I. Clubs
differs from hull and cargo insurance and which
has yet to receive the attention of the courts.
Certain heads of P.&I. Cover have ceased to be
matters which are, as Sir James Hannen P. once
described, merely prudence but have become
compulsory by law. Compulsory liability
insurance was introduced in the area of oil
pollution liability by the International
Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution
1969. Under the regime thereby introduced a
shipowner is legally unable to trade or put to
sea without having effected oil pollution
indemnity insurance and having adequate
liability insurance is as ’necessary’ to a
shipowner as having fuel, stores, navigational
equipment or other well-recognised
"necessaries". It is also arguable that as oil
cannot be lawfully transported without the
carrier having the required insurance cover, a
contract for the entry of the vessel in a P&I
Club could fairly be regarded as an agreement
closely "relating to the carriage of goods in a
ship or to the use of a ship".
It may be that in any future review of the
1952 Arrest Convention, claims relating to
contracts of marine insurance will be included
in the list of claims giving the right of arrest
and provided the wording is framed appropriately
to include club entry it may be that members who
do not pay calls may one day find their vessels
liable to arrest in this country."
The said prophecy has come true. The learned author has also
noted the decision in Marazura Navegacion S.A. and Others v. Oceanus
Mutual Underwriting Association (Bermuda) Ltd. and John Laing
(Management) Ltd. [1977] 1 Lloyd’s Rep. 283 wherein it has been noticed:
"Clubs can and do arrest vessels for non-payment
of calls in jurisdictions which allow such
actions; for example, the United States;"
In an interesting article "the International Convention on Arrest
of Ships 1999" by Richard Shaw, it was opined:
"The 1999 Arrest Convention has produced a set
of principles which are generally regarded as
reasonably balanced, between the interests of
legitimate claimants and those of shipping
organizations seeking to ensure freedom of world
trade without undue interference. The 1952
Arrest Convention has achieved a widespread
degree of acceptance, and indeed there were
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those who argued that it was preferable to
retain its well-tried principles rather than
risk upsetting them while correcting its few
deficiencies.
The extension of the right of arrest to claims
for environmental damage, wreck removal,
insurance premiums, commissions, brokerage and
agency fees, and ship sale contracts are all
significant steps to correct those recognized
deficiencies, while still retaining the
exhaustive list of maritime claims which is the
heritage of the common law Admiralty
jurisdiction. The remainder of the 1999
Convention contains nothing revolutionary, the
radical UK proposal on associated ship arrest
having been rejected by the conference, but
there are a number of provisions which provide
useful clarification of the law. The active
participation in the conference of delegations
from China, Russia and the USA leads one to hope
that these major states may, despite their
relatively low rate of ratification of other
maritime conventions, find this one sufficiently
non-controversial to commend it to their
legislatures."
The learned author further stated:
"The principles of international law relating
to jurisdiction have evolved significantly since
1952, in Europe in particular under the European
Convention on Jurisdiction and Judgments 1968,
but also with the development in English Law of
the doctrine of forum non conveniens in cases
such as the "ABDIN DAVER" [1984] A.C. 398.
The terms of Article 7 have therefore been
drafted to reflect the modern law, while
retaining the original principle in paragraph 1
that, in the absence of another rule of the lex
fori arresti, the courts of the state where the
ship has been arrested shall have jurisdiction
to decide the merits of the claim."
In Project Gabcikovo-Nagymaros (Op. Ind. Weeramantry) the
International Court in its judgment dated 25.9.1997 at page 114 albeit in
a different context observed:
"As this Court observed in the Namibia case, "an
international instrument has to be interpreted
and applied within the framework of the entire
legal system prevailing at the time of the
interpretation" (Legal Consequences for States
of the Continued Presence of South Africa in
Namibia (South West Africa) notwithstanding
Security Council Resolution 276 (1970), Advisory
Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1971, p. 31, para 53),
and these principles are "not limited to the
rules of international law applicable at the
time the treaty was concluded."
In Equilease Corporation Vs. M.V. Sampson [793 F.2d 598] the Court
was considering interpretation of Ship Mortgage Act, 46 providing for
right to a federal maritime lien to "any person furnishing repairs,
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supplies, or other necessaries, to any vessel. It was held:
"Equilease next argues that no maritime lien
arises in favor of James because insurance is
not a "necessary" and therefore neither
general admiralty law nor the Act provides a
maritime lien for unpaid insurance premiums.
Equilease relies on Learned and on Grow v. Steel
Gas Screw Lorrains K, 310 F.2d 547 (6th Cir.
1962), for this proposition. The Grow court
stated in one sentence without elaboration that
there is no federal maritime lien for insurance
premiums, 310 F.2d at 549, and went on to grant
the plaintiff insurance broker a lien under
Michigan state law. Grow is thus not of much
aid to us here. We focus instead on Learned."
"Equilease urges us to apply Learned and to
find that marine insurance in 1986 insures
solely to the benefit of a ship’s owner, in no
way aiding the ship, and therefore, that no
federal lien can be had for unpaid insurance
premiums. This we cannot do.
In the nineteenth century, an insurance policy
on a ship was viewed as a contract for the
personal indemnity of the insured ship’s owner.
Under this reasoning, no lien against the ship
itself could possibly arise as the result of an
insurance policy; "unless the ship is benefited
the ship should not pay." In Re Petition of
Insurance Co. of Pennsylvanis, 22 F.109, 116
(N.D.N.Y.1884), aff’d sub non. Insurance Co. of
Pennsylvania v. The Proceeds of the Sale of the
Barge Waubauschene, 24 F. 559
(C.C.N.D.N.Y.1885). It is no longer
appropriate, however, to view maritime insurance
this way. Even a vessel that simply sits at a
dock without making any attempt to ply the
waters must today have hull protection and
indemnity insurance. As the district court
noted, insurance is something that every vessel
today needs just to carry on its normal
business."
It was further held
"We therefore hold that because insurance is
essential to keep a vessel in commerce,
insurance is a "necessary" under 46 U.S.C.
Sec. 971 and unpaid insurance premiums to give
rise to a maritime lien under the FMLA."
Equilease Corp.(supra) has a greater persuasive value having
regard to the fact that contemporary maritime statutes in England and
other countries do not use the term "necessaries" but the American
Federal Maritime Liens Act does.
The Indian courts need not follow the English judicial ideologies
blindly. We must remind ourselves that in many fields, particularly, in
the matter of preservation of ’Human Rights’ and ’Ecology’, Indian
courts have gone far ahead than their English counterparts.
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The decisions of the English Courts have been held to be a
departure by the American Courts with regard to the jurisdiction of the
admiralty but such departure is a well-known one.
Equilease Corporation has been noticed in Trident Marine Managers
Inc. Vs. Serial No. CEBRF 0661586 [1988 American Maritime Cases 763].
The question, however, is whether a prudent shipowner would
provide for an insurance. A compulsory insurance regime has come into
being and keeping in view the changed situation the definition of the
expression "necessaries" should also undergo a change.
The term "necessary" is a term of art but the same cannot, in our
opinion, be used in a limited context of mandatory claims made for goods
or services supplied to a particular ship for her physical necessity as
opposed to commercial operation and maintenance. Physical necessity and
practicality would be a relevant factor for determination of the said
question. Taking insurance cover would not only be a commercial
prudence but almost a must in the present day context. The third party
insurance may not be compulsory in certain jurisdiction but having
regard to the present day scenario such an insurance cover must be held
to be intrinsically connected with the operation of a ship.
One of the relevant factors for arriving at a conclusion as to
whether anything would come within the expression "necessary" or not
will inter alia depend upon answer to the question as to whether the
prudent owner would provide to enable a ship to perform well the
functions for which she has been engaged. If getting the vehicle
insured with P&I club would be one of the things which would enable a
prudent owner to sail his ship for the purposes for which she has been
engaged, the same would come within the purview of the said term. The
matter must be considered having regard to the changing scenario
inasmuch as the field of insurance has undergone a sea change from
merely hull and machinery, the insurance companies cover various risks
including oil spill damage to the Port, damage to the cargo etc. In
that sense the term must be construed in a broad and liberal manner.
The changing requirement of a ship so as to enable it to trade in
commerce must be kept in mind which would lead to the conclusion that P
& I Insurance cover would be necessary for operation of a ship.
It may be true that there are a large number of insurance covers;
from hull and machinery insurance to protection and indemnity cover.
But the question is not what insurance would be ’necessary’ and what
would not be; as the issue has to be considered not only on a mere
hypothesis but having regard to the statutes framed by other countries
as also the 1999 Arrest Convention.
LEX FORI:
In Benedict on Admiralty, 6th Edn., Vol.1, p. 19, it has been
stated :
"A ship is, of necessity, a wanderer. She
visits shores where her owners are not known or
are inaccessible. The master is the fully
authorized agent of the distant owners but is
not usually of sufficient pecuniary ability to
respond to unforeseen demands of the voyage.
These and other kindred characteristics of
maritime commerce underlie the practice of
finding in the ship itself security, in many
cases, for demands against the master or owners
in their conduct of the ship as an
instrumentality, whether commercial or not, or
in their contracts made on account of the ship."
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In British Shipping Laws, Volume 14, while contrasting maritime
liens and statutory rights of action it is stated:
"Although maritime liens and statutory rights
of action in rem are similar in that they
involve the Admiralty process in rem, there
nonetheless exist fundamental differences
between the two categories. These differences
may be categories as follows:
(1) Nature of the claim
Although the point is not free of uncertainty it
is probably the case that a maritime lien is a
substantive right whereas a statutory right of
action in rem is in essence a procedural remedy.
The object behind the availability of a
statutory right of action in rem is to enable a
claimant to found a jurisdiction and to provide
the res as security for the claim."
In Cheshire and North’s Private International Law, 12th Edition, it
is stated
"At first sight the principle seems almost
self-evident. A person who resorts to an
English court for the purpose of enforcing a
foreign claim cannot expect to occupy a
different procedural position from that of a
domestic litigant. The field of procedure
constitutes perhaps the most technical party of
any legal system, and it comprises many rules
that would be unintelligible to a foreign judge
and certainly unworkable by a machinery designed
on different lines. A party to litigation in
England must take the law of procedure as he
finds it. He cannot by virtue of some rule in
his own country enjoy greater advantages than
other parties here; neither must he be deprived
of any advantages that English law may confer
upon a litigant in the particular form of
action. To take an old example, an English
creditor who sued his debtor in Scotland could
not insist on trial by jury, nor, in the
converse case, could a Scottish creditor suing
in England refuse the intervention of a jury, on
the ground that in Scotland, where the debt
arose, the case would have been tried by a judge
alone."
An insurance transaction more often than not have links with more
than one country. In a given case for resolution of a complex question
the principles of private inter-national law or the conflict of laws may
have to be turned to but with a view to determine the same, disputes
have to be resolved by reference to the system of law which governs the
contract of insurance. The jurisdiction to deal with an action by or
against insurers in England and EC Member States except Denmark are now
governed by EC Council Regulation No. 44/2001. In other countries,
however, the law which is prevailing therein would govern the field. It
may be true that some conventions like Brussels and Lugano are no longer
relevant in most cases involving EC Member States but they form an
important part of the background to the current jurisdictional regime.
For defending the limits of the jurisdiction of the case of a particular
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company the same must, therefore, be governed by the law prevailing
therein. The claim may be a maritime claim in a non-contracting country
but not in others. The ’Club’ in law, therefore, would be entitled to
enforce its claims against the ’Vessel’ keeping in view the law
prevailing in India within whose territorial jurisdiction the ship is
found. Only because, the claim can be enforced in our country and not
in some other countries, by itself would not lead to the conclusion that
it cannot be enforced at all irrespective of the domestic law.
Some countries like Canada, Australia and South Africa as well as
communist regimes like China and Korea have made statutes as a result
whereof the maritime claims stand codified. The expression
’necessaries’ is not used in the said statutes except the statutes of
United States. The domestic legislation indisputably will prevail over
any international convention irrespective of the fact as to whether the
country concerned is a party thereto or not.
The rules for ship arrest in international fora are not uniform.
Despite International Convention on the Arrest of Sea-going Ships 1952
as amended in the year 1999 either having been adopted by some countries
or adopted by others, the law is enforced by the concerned countries
having regard to their own domestic legal system. Where, how and when
can a maritime claimant most advisedly arrest a ship in pursuit of its
claim either in rem or in personem had all along been a complicated
question keeping in view the principles of ’lex fori’.
As a matter of policy legislation or otherwise England did not
want that arrears of insurance premium should be included as a maritime
claim, but the same would not imply that in other countries despite the
unpaid insurance premium being maritime claim, the same would not be
enforced.
SUMMARY OF THE DISCUSSIONS:
The discussions made hereinbefore lead to the conclusion that
having regard to the changing scenario and keeping in tune with the
changes in both domestic and international law as also the statutes
adopted by several countries, a stand, however, bold, may have to be
taken that unpaid insurance premium of P&I Club would come within the
purview of the expression "Necessaries supplied to any ship". Other
types of insurance, keeping in view the existing statutes may not amount
to a "necessary". In any event, such a question, we are not called upon
to answer at present. The discussions made hereinbefore under different
sub-titles of this judgment separately and distinctly may not lead us to
the said conclusion but the cumulative effect of the findings thereunder
makes the conclusion inevitable. The question has not only been
considered from the angle of history of the judicial decisions rendered
by different Courts having great persuasive value but also from the
angle that with the change in time interpretative changes are required
to be made. We, therefore, in agreement with the judgment of the Bombay
High Court, hold that unpaid insurance premium being a maritime claim
would be enforceable in India.
MAINTAINABILIY OF THE LETTERS PATENT APPEAL:
Submission of Mr. Pratap is that by refusing to exercise
discretion to reject a plaint by account, no right or liability of the
party is decided and by reason thereof the procedure for determining the
rights and obligations of the parties are only set in motion. Such an
order would akin to an order admitting the plaint, Mr. Pratap would
submit. Reliance in this connection has been placed on The Justices of
the Peace for Calcutta Vs. Oriental Gas Company [1872 Vol. VIII Bengal
Law Reports 433 at 452].
It was urged that by not rejecting the plaint the defences set out
by the defendant are not obliterated as they will be entitled to raise
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all such contentions at the trial. Reliance in this connection has been
placed on Prahladrai Agarwalla Vs. Shri Renuka Pal [AIR 1982 Cal 259 at
page 266].
Mr. Pratap would further contend that the High Court has misread
and misinterpreted the decision of this Court in Shah Babulal Khimji Vs.
Jayaben Kania [(1981) 4 SCC 8]
By way of an analogy, the learned counsel would argue that leave
to defend a suit granted in favour of the defendant under Order 37 of
the Code of Civil Procedure would not be a ’judgment’ within the meaning
of Clause 15 of the Letter Patent being an interlocutory order as
damage or prejudice in such a matter to the defendant must be a direct
and immediate one.
Clause 15 permits an appeal against the order passed by a Single
Judge of the High Court in the second forum.
The relevant portion of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent reads
thus:
"And we do further ordain that an appeal shall
lie to the said High Court of Judicature at
Madras, Bombay, Fort William in Bengal from the
judgment ... of one Judge of the said High Court
or one Judge of any Division Court, pursuant to
Section 108 of the Government of India Act, and
that notwithstanding anything hereinbefore
provided, an appeal shall lie to the said High
Court from a judgment of one Judge of the said
High Court or one Judge of any Division Court,
pursuant to Section 108 of the Government of
India Act, made (on or after the first day of
February 1929) in the exercise of appellate
jurisdiction in respect of a decree or order
made in the exercise of appellate jurisdiction
by a court subject to the superintendence of the
said High Court where the Judge who passed the
judgment declares that the case is a fit one for
appeal."
The right of appeal which is provided under Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent cannot be said to be restricted.
In Subal Paul v. Malina Paul and Anr. [JT 2003 (5) SC 193] this
Court held:
"While determining the question as regards
Clause 15 of the Letters Patent the court is
required to see as to whether the order sought
to be appealed against is a judgment within the
meaning thereof or not. Once it is held that
irrespective of the nature of the order, meaning
thereby whether interlocutory or final, a
judgment has been rendered, Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent would be attracted.
The Supreme Court in Shah Babulal Khimji’s case
(supra) deprecated a very narrow interpretation
on the word ’judgment’ within the meaning of
Clause 15.
This Court said:
"a court is not justified in interpreting
a legal term which amounts to a complete
distortion of the word ’judgment’ so as to
deny appeals even against unjust orders to
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litigants having genuine grievances so as
to make them scapegoats in the garb of
protecting vexatious appeals. In such
cases, a just balance must be struck so as
to advance the objection of the statute
and give the desired relief to the
litigants, if possible."
In Shah Babulal Khimji’s case (supra), this
Court in no uncertain terms referred to the
judgment under the Special Act which confers
additional jurisdiction to the High Court even
in internal appeal from an order passed by the
Trial Judge to a larger Bench. Letters Patent
has the force of law. It is no longer res
integra. Clause 15 of the Letters Patent confers
a right of appeal on a litigant against any
judgment passed under any Act unless the same is
expressly excluded. Clause 15 may be subject to
an Act but when it is not so subject to the
special provision the power and jurisdiction of
the High Court under Clause 15 to entertain any
appeal from a judgment would be effective.
The decision of this Court in Shah Babulal
Khimji’s case (supra) has been considered in
some details by a Special Bench of the Calcutta
High Court in Tanusree Art Printers and Anr. v.
Rabindra Nath Pal [2000 (2) CHN 213 and 2000 (2)
CHN 843]. It was pointed out:
"If the right of appeal is a creature of a
statute, the same would be governed by the
said statute. Whether an appeal under
Clause 15 of the Letters patent will be
maintainable or not when the matter is
governed by a Special Statute will also
have to be judged from the scheme thereof.
(e.g. despite absence of bar, a Letters
Patent appeal will not be maintainable
from a judgment of the learned Single
Judge rendered under the Representation of
People Act.)"
It was pointed out that in Shah Babulal Khimji’s
case (supra) this Court posed three questions
namely:
"1) Whether in view of Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent an appeal under Section 104
of the Code of Civil Procedure would lie?
2) Whether Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
supersedes Order 43, Rule 1 of the Code of
Civil Procedure? 3) Even Section 104 of
the CPC has no application, whether an
order refusing to grant injunction or
appoint a receiver would be a judgment
within the meaning of Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent?"
The Apex Court answered each of them from a
different angle:
a) Section 104 of the Code of Civil
Procedure read with Order 43, Rule 1
expressly authorizes a forum of appeal
against orders falling under various
clauses of Order 43 Rule 1 to a Larger
Bench of a High Court without at all
disturbing interference with or overriding
the Letters Patent jurisdiction.
b) Having regard to the provisions of
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Section 117 and Order 49 Rule 3 of the
Code of Civil Procedure which excludes
various other provisions from the
jurisdiction of the High Court, it does
not exclude Order 43 Rule 1 of the CPC.
c) There is no inconsistency between
Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule 1 and
the appeals under Letters Patent, as
Letters Patent in any way does not exclude
or override the application under Section
104 read with Order 43 Rule 1 which shows
that these provisions would not apply in
internal appeals within the High Court."
In Prataprai N. Kothari v. John Braganza [(1999)
4 SCC 403], even in a suit for possession only
not based on title, a letters patent appeal was
held to be maintainable.
The decision of this Court in Sharda Devi v.
State of Bihar [(2002) 3 SCC 705] is also to the
same effect, wherein in para 9 it was held:
"A Letters patent is the charter under which the
High Court is established. The powers given to a
High Court under the Letters Patent are akin to
the constitutional powers of a High Court. Thus
when a Letters Patent grants to the High Court a
power of appeal, against a judgment of a Single
Judge, the right to entertain the appeal would
not get excluded unless the statutory enactment
concerned excludes an appeal under the Letters
Patent."
Section 54 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894
provides for an appeal before the High Court and
thereafter to the Supreme Court and despite the
same it was held that a letters patent appeal
under Clause 15 would be maintainable."
The view taken by the Calcutta and Bombay High Court that an order
passed in terms of Order 37 of the Code of Civil Procedure granting
leave to defend would not be a judgment within the meaning of Clause 15
of the Letters Patent may not be of much relevance.
In M/s. Tanusree Art Printers & Anr. Vs. Rabindra Nath Pal [2000
(2) CHN 213] it has been noticed:
"In M/s. Merchants of Traders (P) Ltd. Vs. M/s.
Sarmon Pvt. Ltd., reported in 1997(1) CHN 287,
learned Division Bench although did not consider
this aspect of the matter but held that an order
passed in terms of Order 37 Rule 5 of the Code
of Civil Procedure will not be appealable."
Reliance by Mr. Pratap upon a decision of the Calcutta High Court
in Prahladrai Agarwalla and others Vs. Smt. Renuka Pal and Others [AIR
1982 Cal. 259] wherein it has been held that an order under Order 7 Rule
11 of the Code of Civil Procedure refusing to reject a plaint is not a
judgment, is not apposite.
In the said judgment, however, the judgment of this Court in Shah
Babulal Khimji (supra) was not taken into consideration. The ratio of
the decision of this Court in Shah Babulal Khimji, as regard scope and
ambit of the word "judgment" had not been noticed by the Calcutta High
Court.
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The submission, however, to the effect that in the suit all
defences would be open to the defendant, in our opinion, is misconceived
inasmuch as, no evidence can be adduced in absence of any pleading.
There may not, furthermore be any requirement to go into the trial if
the plaint does not disclose a cause of action.
The contention that an order refusing to reject a plaint is one
akin to order amending the plaint would not be a correct proposition of
law.
The question as to whether the defendant despite such an order
refusing to reject a plaint will have a right to show that the case is
false would again be of no consequence. The said submission, in our
opinion, is based on a wrong premise.
An order refusing to grant leave to a defendant to defend the suit
would be passed when it is found that the defence is a moonshine.
Clause 15 of the Letters Patent is not a special statute. Only in
a case where there exists an express prohibition in the matter of
maintainability of an intra court appeal, the same may not be held to be
maintainable. But in the event there does not exist any such
prohibition and if the Order will otherwise be a ’judgment’ within the
meaning of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent, an appeal shall be
maintainable.
What would be a judgment is stated in Shah Babulal Khimji (supra)
as under:
"We think that "judgment" in Clause 15 means a
decision which affects the merits of the
question between the parties by determining some
right or liability. It may be either final, or
preliminary, or interlocutory, the difference
between them being that a final judgment
determines the whole cause or suit, and a
preliminary or interlocutory judgment determines
only a part of it, leaving other matters to be
determined.
81. An analysis of the observations of the Chief
Justice would reveal that the following tests
were laid down by him in order to decide whether
or not an order passed by the Trial Judge would
be a judgment :
(1) a decision which affects the merits of the
question between the parties;
(2) by determining some right or liability;
(3) the order determining the right or liability
may be final, preliminary or interlocutory, but
the determination must be final or one which
decides even a part of the controversy finally
leaving other matters to be decided later.
In Lea Badin Vs. Upendra Mohan Roy [AIR 1935 Cal. 35], the
Calcutta High Court held that an order refusing to appoint a receiver is
determinative of a right of the plaintiff and would accordingly be a
judgment.
Yet again in Chittaranjan Mondal Vs. Sankar Prosad Sahani [AIR
1972 Cal. 469] the Calcutta High Court held that an order refusing to
grant an injunction restraining execution of the judgment-debtor was a
judgment within the meaning of Clause 15.
As by reason of an order passed under Order 7, Rule 11 of the Code
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of Civil Procedure, the rights conferred upon the parties are determined
one way or the other, stricto sensu it would not be an interlocutory
order but having regard to its traits and trappings would be a
preliminary judgment.
It is true that in Shah Babulal Khimji (supra) it is stated that
an order rejecting the plaint would be appealable but does not expressly
state that an order refusing to reject would not be appealable. Therein
this Court gave 15 instances where an order would be appealable which
are only illustrative in nature.
Such observations have to be understood having regard to the
concept of finality which are of three types:
(1) a final judgment
(2) a preliminary judgment and
(3) intermediary or interlocutory judgment.
In our opinion the order refusing to reject the plaint falls in
the category of a preliminary judgment and is covered by the second
category carved out by this Court.
It is trite that a party should not be unnecessarily harassed in
a suit. An order refusing to reject a plaint will finally determine his
right in terms of Order 7 Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The idea underlying Order 7 Rule 11A is that when no cause of
action is disclosed, the courts will not unnecessarily protract the
hearing of a suit. Having regard to the changes in the legislative
policy as adumbrated by the amendments carried out in the Code of Civil
Procedure, the Courts would interpret the provisions in such a manner so
as to save expenses, achieve expedition, avoid the court’s resources
being used up on cases which will serve no useful purpose. A litigation
which in the opinion of the court is doomed to fail would not further be
allowed to be used as a device to harass a litigant. (See Azhar Hussain
Vs. Rajiv Gandhi 1986 Supp SCC 315 at 324-35).
In Dhartipakar Aggarwal Vs. Rajiv Gandhi [1987 Supp SCC 93], this
court held:
"9. In K. Kamaraja Nadar v. Kunju Thevar (1959
SCR 583 : AIR 1958 SC 687 : 14 ELR 270), the
Election Tribunal and the High Court both
refused to consider preliminary objections
raised by the returned candidate at the initial
stage on the ground that the same would be
considered at the trial of the election
petition. This Court set aside the order and
directed that the preliminary objection should
be entertained and a decision reached thereupon
before further proceedings were taken in the
election petition. Bhagwati, J. speaking for the
Court observed thus :
We are of opinion that both the Election
Tribunal and the High Court were wrong in the
view they took. If the preliminary objection was
not entertained and a decision reached
thereupon, further proceedings taken in the
election petition would mean a full-fledged
trial involving examination of a large number of
witnesses on behalf of the second respondent in
support of the numerous allegations of corrupt
practices attributed by him to the appellant,
his agents or others working on his behalf;
examination of a large number of witness by or
on behalf of the appellant controverting the
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allegations made against him; examination of
witness in support of the recrimination
submitted by the appellant against the second
respondent; and a large number of visits by the
appellant from distant places like Delhi and
Bombay to Ranchi resulting in not only heavy
expenses and loss of time and diversion of the
appellant from his public duty in the various
fields of activity including those in the House
of the People. It would mean unnecessary
harassment and expenses for the appellant which
could certainly be avoided if the preliminary
objection urged by him was decided at the
initial stage by the Election Tribunal.
It was opined that in a given case a full dressed trial need not
be undertaken.
Yet again in Samar Singh Vs. Kedar Nath (1987 Suppl. SCC 224) it
has been held :
"In substance, the argument is that the court must
proceed with the trial, record the evidence, and only
after the trial of the election petition is concluded
that the powers under the Code of Civil Procedure for
dealing appropriately with the defective petition
which does not disclose cause of action should be
exercised. With respect to the learned counsel, it is
an argument which it is difficult to comprehend. The
whole purpose of conferment of such powers is to
ensure that a litigation which is meaningless and
bound to prove abortive should not be permitted to
occupy the time of the court and exercise the mind of
the respondent."
We may notice a converse case. In Dipak Chandra Ruhidas Vs.
Chandan Kumar Sarkar [(2003) 7 SCC 66], in view of Section 98 (a) and
Section 116-A of the Representation of People Act, a question arose as
to whether dismissing an election petition at the threshold shall be
appealable. This Court observed:
"13. Furthermore, Section 86 deals with trial of
election petitions, Sub-section (1) whereof is a
part of it. Trial has not been defined. In
Black’s Law Dictionary at page 1348 it is
stated:
"A judicial examination and determination
of issues between parties to action, Gulf,
C. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. Smit, Okl., 270 P.2d
629, 633; whether they be issues of law or
of fact, Pulaski v. State, 23 Wis. 2d 138,
126 N.W. 2d 625, 628. A judicial
examination, in accordance with law of the
land, of a cause, either civil or
criminal, of the issues between the
parties whether of law or fact, before a
court that has proper jurisdiction".
14. It is, therefore, not necessary that the
trial must be a full dressed or a jury trial or
a trial which concludes only after taking
evidence of a parties in support of their
respective cases.
15. Section 116A provides for an appeal. The
said provision must be given a liberal and
purposive construction. The scope of an appeal
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should be held to be wider than an application
for judicial review or a petition under Article
136 of the Constitution of India.
16. Furthermore, the Representation of the
People Act provides for a complete machinery.
The right of appeal conferred upon a suitor must
be considered from that angle. When an order is
passed under Section 98 of the Act, the same may
be in terms of either Sub-section (1) of Section
86 or otherwise. An appeal lies against a final
order. An order passed under Sub-section (1) of
Section 86 is also final. It may be that in the
event an appeal therefrom is allowed, the matter
may be required to be sent back but that would
not render an order passed thereunder as an
interlocutory one. It does not take away the
concept of the finality attached therewith."
In Central Mine Planning and Design Institute Ltd. Vs. Union of
India and Another [(2001) 2 SCC 588] this Court upon referring Shah
Babulal Khimji (supra) held:
"Adverting to the facts of this case, Section
17-B of the ID Act confers valuable rights on
the workmen and correspondingly imposes onerous
obligations on the employer. The order in
question passed by the learned Single Judge
determines the entitlement of the workmen to
receive benefits and imposes an obligation on
the appellant to pay such benefits provided in
the said section. That order cannot but be
"judgment" within the meaning of clause 10 of
Letters Patent, Patna. The High Court is
obviously in error in holding that the said
order is not judgment within the meaning of
clause 10 of the Letters Patent of Patna."
We, therefore, are of the opinion that Letters Patent Appeal was
maintainable.
REJECTION OF PLAINT:
Whether a plaint discloses a cause of action or not is essentially
a question of fact. But whether it does or does not must be found out
from reading the plaint itself. For the said purpose the averments made
in the plaint in their entirety must be held to be correct. The test is
as to whether if the averments made in the plaint are taken to be
correct in its entirety, a decree would be passed.
CAUSE OF ACTION:
A cause of action is a bundle of facts which are required to be
pleaded and proved for the purpose of obtaining relief claimed in the
suit. For the aforementioned purpose, the material facts are required
to be stated but not the evidence except in certain cases where the
pleading relies on any misrepresentation, fraud, breach of trust, wilful
default, or undue influence.
Order 7 Rule 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides as
follows:
"14 PRODUCTION OF DOCUMENT ON WHICH PLAINTIFF
SUES OR RELIES.
(1) Where a plaintiff sues upon a document or
relies upon document in his possession or power
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in support of his claim, he shall enter such
documents in a list, and shall produce it in
Court when the plaint is presented by him and
shall, at the same time deliver the document and
a copy thereof, to be filed with the plaint.
(2) Where any such document is not in the
possession or power of the plaintiff, he shall,
where possible, state in whose possession or
power it is.
(3) Where a document or a copy thereof is not
filed with the plaint under this rule, it shall
not be allowed to be received in evidence on
behalf of the plaintiff at the hearing of the
suit.
(4) Nothing in this rule shall apply to document
produced for the cross-examination of the
plaintiff’s witnesses, or, handed over to a
witness merely to refresh his memory."
In the instant case the ’Club’ not only annexed certain documents
with the plaint but also filed a large number of documents therewith.
Those documents having regard to Order 7 Rule 14 of the Code of Civil
Procedure are required to be taken into consideration for the purpose of
disposal of application under Order 7 Rule 11(a) of the Code of Civil
Procedure. The ’Club’ in its plaint pleaded:
"The Plaintiff is a Protection & Indemnity
Association incorporated under the laws of the
United Kingdom and carries on business through
its Managers, Liverpool & London P&I Management
Ltd. at Liverpool, UK. The Plaintiff is a
mutual association of ship-owners and offers
insurance cover in respect of vessels entered
with it for diverse third party risks associated
with the operation and trading of vessels. This
insurance is commonly known as Protection &
Indemnity (P&I) cover in respect of various
risks associated with the vessels in their
maritime adventure. The 1st Defendant vessel
m.v. "Sea Success I" is a sistership of the
vessels "Sea Ranger" and "Sea Glory" which
were entered for P&I risks with the Plaintiff
Association. The said two vessels were entered
into the Plaintiff’s Association for the policy
year 1999-2000 by Defendant No. 2, Singapore
Soviet Shipping Co. Pte. Ltd. who, as per the
terms of the insurance and Rules of the
Plaintiff Association, were recognized and
considered to be the owners of the said two
vessels and the assured under the policy of
insurance. The 1st Defendant vessel is owned
and/ or controlled by Defendant No. 2 through
its wholly owned 100% subsidiary, Singapore
Soviet Shipping Corporation Inc., Monrovia. The
1st Defendant vessel is presently at the port and
harbour of Mumbai within the territorial waters
of India and within the Admiralty jurisdiction
of this Hon’ble Court. The 2nd Defendant is the
owner of the 1st Defendant and is also inter alia
the party liable in personam in respect of the
Plaintiff’s claim.
The Plaintiff submits as more particularly
stated in paragraph 1 above, that the 1st
Defendant vessel is a sistership of the two
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vessels "Sea Glory" and "Sea Ranger" in view
of the beneficial ownership, management of all
three vessels having vested in Defendant No. 2.
The Plaintiff further submits that Defendant No.
2 is liable in personam in respect of the unpaid
insurance premium in respect of the two vessels
"Sea Glory" and "Sea Ranger". Consequently,
the Plaintiff is entitled to arrest any other
vessel in the ownership of Defendant No. 2. The
1st Defendant vessel is owned by Defendant No. 2
through it’s 100% subsidiary S.S. Shipping Co.
Inc. In the circumstances, the Plaintiff
submits that they are entitled to proceed
against the Defendant vessel in rem and are
entitled to an order of arrest, detention and
sale of the vessel for recovery of their
outstanding dues in respect of insurance premium
as more particularly stated above. The
Plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to have the
Defendant vessel along with her hull, gear,
engines, tackle, machinery, bunkers, plant,
apparel, furniture, equipments and all
appurtenances thereto condemned and arrested
under a warrant of arrest of this Hon’ble Court
for realization of the Plaintiff’s dues. The
Plaintiff is further entitled to have the
Defendant vessel sold under the orders and
directions of this Hon’ble Court and to have the
sale proceeds thereof applied towards the
satisfaction of the Plaintiff’s claim in the
suit. The Plaintiff is entitled to an order of
arrest of the Defendant vessel as arrest is the
only method of proceeding against the said
vessel in rem. The Plaintiff submits that if
such an order of arrest is not granted,
irreparable harm and injury will be caused to
the Plaintiff inasmuch as the Plaintiff’s suit
will be rendered infructuous. There is no other
alternative efficacious remedy available to the
Plaintiff.
The Club has pleaded that the vessel is a sister ship of ’Sea
Ranger’ and ’Sea Glory’ owned and possessed by the second defendant. The
Club has also pleaded that the defendant No. 2 is beneficial owner of
the first defendant ship. Determination on such assertions would amount
to determination of question of fact. If the ’Vessel’ denies or
disputes the same; an issue in that behalf will have to be framed and
decided.
Beneficial ownership of a ship is not a question of fact alone.
It is a mixed question of fact and law. In William Vs. Wilcox [(1838) 8
Ad. & EL 331] it is held:
"It is an elementary rule in pleading that when
a state of facts is relied, it is enough to
allege it simply, without setting out the
subordinate facts which are the means of proving
it or the evidence sustaining the allegations."
The aforementioned dicta has been quoted with approval in Mohan
Rawale Vs. Damodar Tatyaba & Ors. [(1994) 2 SCC 392].
It may be true that Order 7 Rule 11(a) although authorises the
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court to reject a plaint on failure on the part of the plaintiff to
disclose a cause of action but the same would not mean that the
averments made therein or a document upon which reliance has been placed
although discloses a cause of action, the plaint would be rejected on
the ground that such averments are not sufficient to prove the facts
stated therein for the purpose of obtaining reliefs claimed in the suit.
The approach adopted by the High Court, in this behalf, in our opinion,
is not correct.
In D. Ramachandran Vs. R.V. Janakiraman & Ors. [(1999) 3 SCC 267],
this Court held:
"It is well settled that in all cases of
preliminary objection, the test is to see
whether any of the reliefs prayed for could be
granted to the appellant if the averments made
in the petition are proved to be true. For the
purpose of considering a preliminary objection,
the averments in the petition should be assumed
to be true and the court has to find out whether
those averments disclose a cause of action or a
triable issue as such. The court cannot probe
into the facts on the basis of the controversy
raised in the counter."
Furthermore a fact which is within the special knowledge of the
defendant need not be pleaded in the plaint. In Punit Rai vs. Dinesh
Chaudhary [JT 2003 (Supp.1) SC 557], it is stated:
"...These are the material facts relating to the
plea raised by the appellant that the respondent
is not a Scheduled caste. We don’t think if the
respondent means to say that the petitoner
should have stated in the petition that the
respondent is not born of Deo Kumari Devi said
to be married to Bhagwan Singh in village Adai.
If at all these facts would be in the special
knowledge of respondent, Bhagwan Singh and Deo
Kumari Devi hence not required to be pleaded in
the election petition. It is not possible as
well. In this connection, a reference may be
made to a decision of this Court in Balwan Singh
vs. Lakshmi Nrain and Ors {AIR 1960 SC 770).
This case also relates to election matter and it
was held that facts which are in the special
knowledge of the other party could not be
pleaded by the election petitioner. It was
found that particulars of the arrangement of
hiring or procuring a vehicle would never be in
the knowledge of the petitioner, such facts need
not and cannot be pleaded in the petition."
In D. Ramachandran Vs. R.V. Janakiraman & Ors. [1999] 3 SCC 267,
it has been held that the Court cannot dissect the pleading into several
parts and consider whether each one of them discloses a cause of action.
In the aforementioned backdrop, the question as to whether the
Club had been able to show that the Respondent No. 1 is a sister ship of
"Sea Glory" and "Sea Ranger" admittedly belonging to the first
respondent is a matter which is required to be gone into in the suit.
In ascertaining whether the plaint shows a cause of action, the
court is not required to make an elaborate enquiry into doubtful or
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complicated questions of law or fact. By the statute the jurisdiction
of the court is restricted to ascertaining whether on the allegations a
cause of action is shown. In Vijay Pratap Singh Vs. Dukh Haran Nath
Singh [AIR 1962 SC 941] this Court held:
"By the express terms of r. 5 clause (d), the
court is concerned the ascertain whether the
allegations made in the petition show a cause of
action. The court has not to see whether the
claim made by the petitioner is likely to
succeed: it has merely to satisfy itself that
the allegations made in the petition, if
accepted as true, would entitle the petitioner
to the relief he claims. If accepting those
allegations as true no case is made out for
granting relief no cause of action would be
shown and the petition must be rejected. But in
ascertaining whether the petition shows a cause
of action the court does not enter upon a trial
of the issues affecting the merits of the claim
made by the petitioner. It cannot take into
consideration the defences which the defendant
may raise upon the merits; nor is the court
competent to make an elaborate enquiry into
doubtful or complicated questions of law or
fact. If the allegations in the petition, prima
facie, show a cause of action, the court cannot
embark upon an enquiry whether the allegations
are true in fact, or whether the petitioner will
succeed in the claims made by him."
So long as the claim discloses some cause of action or raises some
questions fit to be decided by a Judge, the mere fact that the case is
weak and not likely to succeed is no ground for striking it out. The
purported failure of the pleadings to disclose a cause of action is
distinct from the absence of full particulars. [See Mohan Rawale
(supra)]
Beneficial ownership is not a pure question of fact. It is a
mixed question of law and fact. In that view of the matter it was not
necessary for the Club to set out the subordinate facts which arte means
of proving it or the evidence sustaining the allegations. The High
Court, however, in its order rejecting the plaint held:
"We have not gone into the merits of the
Defendant No. 1 ship, we clarify, on the basis
of any averments made by Defendant No. 1, to the
contrary, but we have proceeded to examine the
same on the basis of the averments made in the
plaint to find out whether, as they stand, prove
the Defendant No. 1 vessel Sea Success -I to be
sister ship of vessels - "Sea Glory" and "Sea
Ranger" being beneficially owned by Defendant
No. 2. We have already indicated above that the
allegations made in the plaint by themselves do
not prove factum of Defendant No. 1 Sea Success-
I being sister ship of vessels "Sea Glory" and
"Sea Ranger" in respect of whom the claim has
been raised in the suit, we find it difficult to
approve the view of the learned Single Judge in
this regard. It cannot be overlooked that ship
is a valuable commercial chattel and her arrest
undeservingly severely prejudices third parties
innocently as well as affect the interest of
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owner, crew member, cargo owner, shipper etc.
adversely and, therefore, it is all the more
necessary to analyse the plaint meaningfully at
the threshold to find out whether it discloses
cause of action or not and not on technical and
formal reading that if discloses cause of action
and wait for trial."
The approach of the High Court, in our considered opinion, is not
correct. For the purpose of rejecting a plaint it is not necessary to
consider whether the averments made in the plaint prove the factum that
the defendant No. 1 "Sea Success-I" is a sister ship of "Sea Glory" and
"Sea Ranger" or the said two ships are beneficially owned by the
defendant No. 2. The reasons which have been assigned in support of the
said aforementioned finding that that the ship is a valuable commercial
chattel and her arrest undeservingly prejudices third parties as well as
affect the interest of owner and others is a question which must be gone
into when passing a final order as regard interim arrest of ship or
otherwise. For the aforementioned purpose the Vessel herein could file
an application for vacation of stay. While considering such an
application, the Court was entitled to consider not only a prima facie
case but also the elements of balance of convenience and irreparable
injury involved in the matter. In such a situation and particularly
when both the parties disclose their documents which are in their
possession, the Court would be in a position to ascertain even prima
facie as to whether the Club has been able to make out that "Sea Glory"
and "Sea Ranger" are sister vessels of the "Vessel".
The reason for the aforementioned conclusion is that if a legal
question is raised by the defendant in the written statement, it does
not mean that the same has to be decided only by way of an application
under Order 7 Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure which may amount to
pre-judging the matter.
Furthermore, the question as to whether the asset of a 100%
subsidy can be treated as an asset of the parent company would again
depend upon the fact situation of each case.
In The Aventicum [1978] 1 Lloyd’s L.R. it has been held:
"I have no doubt that on a motion of this kind
it is right to investigate the true beneficial
ownership. I reject any suggestion that it is
impossible "to pierce the corporate veil". I of
course remember, as Mr. Howard urges, the case
of Saloman v. Saloman & Co., [1897] A.C. 22, but
of course it is plain that s.3(4) of the Act
intends that the Court shall not be limited to a
consideration of who is the registered owner or
who is the person having legal ownership of the
shares in the ship; the directions are to look
at the beneficial ownership. Certainly in a
case where there is a suggestion of a
trusteeship or a nominee holding, there is no
doubt that the Court can investigate it. I
think that it may well be, without having to
resolve the difference of opinion expressed by
Mr. Justice Brandon and Mr. Justice Goff in the
two cases to which I have referred that the
Court has the power and should in some cases
look even further."
Yet again in The Andrea Ursula [1971] 1 Lloyd’s L.R. 145, the
Court opined:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 46 of 46
"There is no definition in the Act of the
expression "beneficially owned" as used in sect.
3(4). It could mean owned by someone who,
whether he is the legal owner or not, is in any
case the equitable owner. That would cover both
the case of a ship the legal and equitable title
to which are in one person, A, and also the case
of a ship the legal title to which is in one
person, A, but the equitable title to which is
in another person, B. In the first case the
ship would be beneficially owned by A, and in
the second case by B. Trusts of ships, express
or implied, are however, rare and the words seem
to me to be capable also of a different and more
practical meaning related not to title, legal or
equitable, but to lawful possession and control
with the use and benefit which are derived from
them. If that meaning were right, a ship would
be beneficially owned by a person who, whether
he was the legal or equitable owner or not,
lawfully had full possession and control of her,
and, by virtue of such possession and control,
had all the benefit and use of her which a legal
or equitable owner would ordinarily have."
Furthermore, the question as to whether the concept of ownership
of a ship which has been introduced in 18th Century when there had been
no joint stock companies and the concept of shares in a ship so as to
encourage the individuals to pool their resources by a sister ship so
that they may become co-owners is a matter which is required to be
considered at an appropriate stage. We do not think that such a
question can justifiably be gone into at this stage.
We do not intend to delve deep into the questions as to whether
the two ships named hereinabove are the sister ships of the respondent
No. 1 Vessel or whether the requirement of law as regard ownership of a
ship in the Respondent No. 1 as beneficial owner has been fulfilled or
not. Such issues must be considered at an appropriate stage.
CONCLUSION :
We, therefore, direct that in the event, a proper application is
filed either for dissolution of the interim order of injunction passed
by the learned Single Judge or if the High Court in its wisdom thinks
fit to decide any issue as a preliminary issue such questions may be
gone into in greater details. Any observations made by us must be
considered to have been made only for the purpose of disposal of these
appeals and not for the purpose of determining the merit of the matter.
However, having regard to the facts and circumstances of this case, we
will request the High Court to consider the desirability of disposing of
the matter as expeditiously as possible and preferably within a period
of three months from the date of receipt of a copy of this order.
For the reasons aforementioned, the judgment under challenge is
set aside and the matter is sent back to the High Court. Civil Appeal
No. 5665 of 2002 is accordingly allowed and Civil Appeal No. 5666 of
2002 is dismissed. No costs.