Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7039 of 2002
PETITIONER:
Epoch Enterrepots
RESPONDENT:
M.V. WON FU
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/10/2002
BENCH:
Umesh C. Banerjee & Y.K. Sabharwal.
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
BANERJEE,J.
Leave granted.
Issuance of warrant for the arrest of the vessel M.V. WON FU berthed
at Madras Port has been the principal controversy before the Madras High
Court in its Admiralty Jurisdiction.
The plaintiff being the appellant herein instituted a suit for recovery of
damages of 11 lakhs for breach of contract with interest at the rate of 24%
per annum by reason of loss and damages suffered and caused by breach of
contract by the defendant vessel. The factual element we will refer shortly
here after but presently be it noted that against the refusal to entertain the
suit and the consequent dismissal of the same before the learned trial judge,
the plaintiff moved the appellate forum in the High Court but having failed
to obtain the relief the petition for special leave under Article 136 has been
moved before this Court and this Court at the admission stage itself upon
issuance of notice and upon the grant of leave as appears herein before
proceeded to deal with the issue without much of procedural formalities.
Turning attention to a brief reference on to the factual score it appears
that the plaintiff being a sole proprietor concern stands involved in the
business of export of mines and minerals especially in Feldspar. In the usual
course of events plaintiff entered into an agreement with M/s. SAN I.
Mining Company at Taiwan to export Feldspar and to complete the
agreement between the parties the plaintiff entered into an agreement with
said to be defendant’s ship disponent owner, to export the cargo of Feldspar
from Tuticorin harbour to Taiwan. The agreement is stated to be evidenced
in a fixture note dated 20.10.1995. The relevant extract whereof are as
below:
"It is this day mutually agreed between Taiyo
Senpaku Kaisha, Ltd. Tokyo as disponent owners and
Epoch Entrrepots. Madras as charterers on the following
terms and conditions
- Vessel: X/Y WONFU AS DESCRIBED.
- Cargo: XIN 8.000 MI IN IF BLS FELDSPAR
UPTO VSLS FULL CAPA CHOP
- L/D Port: 1SB SP Tuticorin India/1-SB 1 SP
TAICHUNG, TAIWAN
-Laycan: 25th Oct-5th Nov.1995
-L/D Rate: 1.200 XT PWDSSEX BIU/1.500MT
PWDSEEX W IUARC
-Freight: VSD 25.00 PWI FIOST BSS 1/1
-Payment: 100 pet frt payable w/I 5 banking days acol
S/BLS/L
FET prepaid
-Full frt TB deexed earned by ovrs CH is discountless
non-returnable whether CGO/VSL Lost or not lost.
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-CGO TB loaded in unobstructed main hold only
-Demurrage: USS 4000.00/DHD Vis be
-Agents Owners Agents be
..
Disponent owners Charterers
TAIYO Senpaku Kaisha Ltd. Manager
M. Takahashi, Managing EPOCH Entrepots
Director Suguna Apartments
12-A, Lloyds Road,
Madras 600 014"
On the factual matrix the learned Senior Advocate Mr. ATM Sampath
rather emphatically contended that the contract stands completed by the
signing of the fixture note and the plaintiff has also acted in terms therewith
by exporting stock 8400 MT of Feldspar to Taiwan through the defendant’s
vessel on 26.10.1995. It has been the contention that the defendant’s ship
has failed to act in terms of the fixture note by reason wherefor the plaintiff
has not been able to send the cargo to the purchaser as per the schedule thus
exposing the plaintiff to suffer a loss of 11 lakhs by reason of a deliberate
act of default to ship the cargo on the vessel.
As detailed above the learned single Judge dismissed the suit and
recorded inter alia the following:
"The plaintiff sought for the claim of arrest of the
vessel and for damages. The arrest of the vessel can be
sought for only under the Admiralty Jurisdiction.
Nothing was performed with regard to loading of cargo
in the ship. The plaintiff states that since the contract for
export of goods was dropped, the vessel must be arrested.
Since no shipment of the cargo has taken place, the
Admiralty Jurisdiction of this Court cannot be invoked.
The fixture note Ex.P1 is between the plaintiff and Taiyo
Senpaku Kaisha Ltd. No contract has been entered into
between the plaintiff and the defendant, the owner of the
vessel WON FU. Absolutely there is no disponent to link
the defendant with the alleged contract and that there was
a concluded contract between the plaintiff and the
defendant. In the absence of any specific evidence to
prove that there was a contract between the plaintiff and
the defendant. I am quite unable to accept the case of the
plaintiff. I hold that there is no privity of contract
between the plaintiff and defendant. If at all there was
breach of contract, the plaintiff has to seek their remedy
under the proper forum for breach of contract. Since no
shipment had taken place and as the ship is not involved
for the breach of contract by the disponent owner or any
other party the Admiralty Jurisdiction of this Court
cannot be involved and arrest of vessel cannot be sought
for. The facts and circumstances of the case do not come
under the Admiralty Jurisdiction of this Court. Further,
the suit is also not filed against the proper party. The
name of the owner of this ship is not mentioned in the
short cause title. It is not clear from the plaint as to
against whom the plaintiff sought the relief. The suit has
not been properly framed."
It is this conclusion and the finding of the learned Single Judge stands
accepted by the Division Bench without however much elucidation on the
same and as such we refrain ourselves from recording herein any further
save that the appeal by the plaintiffs stands rejected and the present appeal
before this Court by reason therefor.
Without however going to the issue of privity of contract which has
been one of the basic reasons for the learned single judge to come to the
conclusion, be it noted that the suit has been framed for the arrest of the
vessel MV WON FU in the Admiralty Jurisdiction of the High Court at
Madras. At this juncture however a brief historical perspective of the
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Admiralty Jurisdiction in the country may be adverted. The three erstwhile
Presidency High Courts (in common and popular parlance Chartered High
Courts), namely, Calcutta, Bombay and Madras were having the Letters
Patent for the conferment of the ordinary original civil jurisdiction and by
reason of the provisions contained therein read with the Admiralty Court
Act, 1861 and subsequent enactment of Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act,
1890 and Colonial Courts of Admiralty (India) Act.
The High Courts of these three Presidency towns were conferred with
the same jurisdiction as was vested in the High Court of England and the
High Courts were declared to be otherwise competent to regulate their
procedure and practice as would be deemed necessary corresponding to the
Indian perspective in exercise of the admiralty jurisdiction by way of rules
framed in that regard. There is no manner of doubt that there existed or is
existing any fetter in regard to the exercise of admiralty jurisdiction in so far
as the three High Courts at Calcutta, Bombay and Madras are concerned.
It is in this context observations of this Court in M.V. Elisabeth v.
Harwan Investment and Trading Pvt. Ltd., Goa [AIR 1993 SC 1014] seem
to be of some assistance. This Court in paragraph 26 of the report observed:
"Assuming that the admiralty powers of the High
Courts in India are limited to what had been derived from
the Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act, 1890, that Act,
having equated certain Indian High Courts to the High
Court of England in regard to admiralty jurisdiction, must
be considered to have conferred on the former all such
powers which the latter enjoyed in 1890 and thereafter
during the period preceding the Indian Independence Act,
1947. what the Act of 1890 did was, as stated earlier, not
to incorporate any English statute into Indian law, but to
equate the admiralty jurisdiction of the Indian High
Courts over places, persons, matters and things to that of
the English High Court. As the Admiralty jurisdiction of
the English High Courts expanded with the progress of
legislation and with the repeal of the earlier statues,
including in substance the Admiralty Court Acts of 1840
and 1861, it would have been reasonable and rational to
attribute to the Indian High Courts a corresponding
growth and expansion of admiralty jurisdiction during the
pre-independence era. But a restrictive view was taken
on the question in the decision of the High Courts cited
above."
Turning attention on to the appeal presently before us the cardinal
issue arises for consideration stands out to be the applicability of the concept
of Maritime Lien on the basis of the fixture note as above stated and
alternatively as to whether the fixture note by itself would give rise to a right
in rem thereby enabling the plaintiff to initiate proceedings under Admiralty
Jurisdiction of the High Court at Madras.
Before embarking on to the discussions apropos above, certain
notions as regards the constituents of Maritime Liens ought to be noticed:
the Encyclopedia Britannica has the following to state as regards Maritime
Lien and the same reads as below:
"Maritime liens: although admiralty actions are
frequently brought in personam, against individual or
corporate defendants only, the most distinctive feature of
admiralty practice is the proceeding in rem, against
maritime property, that is, a vessel, a cargo, or "freight",
which in shipping means the compensation to which a
carrier is entitled for the carriage of cargo.
Under American maritime law the ship is
personified to the extent that it may sometimes be held
responsible under no liability. The classic example of
personification is the "compulsory pilotage" case. Some
State statutes impose a penalty on a ship owner whose
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vessel fails to take a pilot when entering or leaving the
waters of the State. Since the pilotage is thus
compulsory, the pilot’s negligence is not imputed to the
ship owner. Nevertheless, the vessel itself is charged
with the pilot’s fault and is immediately impressed with
an inchoate maritime lien that is enforceable in Court.
Maritime liens can arise not only when the
personified ship is charged with a maritime tort, such as a
negligent collision or time tort, such as a negligent
collision or personal injury, but also for salvage services,
for general average contributions and for breach of
certain maritime contracts."
Incidentally, be it noted that this concept of maritime lien did come
for judicial scrutiny before the Courts often and it is Sir John Jervis who
probably for the first time in The Bold Buccleugh (1851 (7) Moo P.C. 267)
defined the maritime lien as below :
".a maritime lien is well defined .. to mean a claim or
privilege upon a thing to be carried into effect by legal process
. that process to be a proceeding in rem. This claim or
privilege travels with the thing into whosoevers possession it
may come. It is incohate from the moment the claim or
privilege attaches, and, when carried into effect by legal
process by a proceeding in rem, relates back to the period when
it first attached."
While the definition provided by Sir John Jervis, as above, stands
accepted in various other decisions of the English Courts, the definition by
Atkin L.J. in The Tervaete (1922 (P) 259) became subject matter of criticism
by reason of its failure to distinguish a maritime lien and its maritime right
of action in rem. Atkin L.J., however, in The Tervaete defined the maritime
lien as below :
" of the right by legal proceedings in an appropriate form to
have the ship seized by the officers of the Court and made
available by sale if not released on bail."
In M.V. AL Quamar v. Tsavliris Salvage (International) Ltd. & Ors.
(2000 (8) SCC 278: AIR 2000 SC 2826) this Court upon reference to
Elisabeth’s case (supra) has the following to state as regards the attributes of
maritime lien. This Court observed in paragraphs 33 to 36 as below:
33. Be it noted that there are two attributes to maritime
lien : (a) a right to a part of the property in the res; and (b)
a privileged claim upon a ship, aircraft or other maritime
property in respect of services rendered to, or injury caused
by that property. Maritime lien thus attaches to the
property in the event the cause of action arises and remains
attached. It is, however, inchoate and very little positive
in value unless it is enforced by an action. It is a right which
springs from general maritime law and is based on the
concept as if the ship itself has caused the harm, loss or
damage to others or to their property and thus must itself
make good that loss. (See in this context ’Maritime Law’ by
Christopher Hill, 2nd Edn.)
34. As regards the concept of proceeding in rem and
proceeding in personam, it should be understood as
actions being related to the same subject-matter and are
alternative methods pertaining to the same claim and can
stand side by side.
35. In this context, reference may also be made to the
observations of this Court in M.V. Elisabeth’s case, (AIR
1993 SC 1014) (supra), as stated below :-
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"47. Merchant ships of different nationalities
travel from port to port carrying goods or
passengers. They incur liabilities in the course
of their voyage and they subject themselves to
the jurisdiction of foreign States when they enter
the waters of those States. They are liable to be
arrested for the enforcement of maritime claims,
or seized in execution or satisfaction of
judgments in legal actions arising out of
collisions, salvage, loss of life or personal
injury, loss of or damage to goods and the like.
They are liable to be detained or confiscated by
the authorities of foreign States for violating
their customs, regulations, safety measures, rules
of the road, health regulations, and for other
causes. The coastal State may exercise its
criminal jurisdiction on board the vessel for the
purpose of arrest or investigation in connection
with certain serious crimes. In the course of an
international voyage, a vessel thus subjects itself
to the public and private laws of various
countries. A ship travelling from port to port
stays very briefly in any one port. A plaintiff
seeking to enforce his maritime claim against a
foreign ship has no effective remedy once it has
sailed away and if the foreign owner has neither
property nor residence within jurisdiction. The
plaintiff may therefore detain the ship by
obtaining an order of attachment whenever it is
feared that the ship is likely to slip out of
jurisdiction, thus leaving the plaintiff without
any security.
48. A ship may be arrested (i) to acquire
jurisdiction; or (ii) to obtain security for
satisfaction of the claim when decreed; or (iii) in
execution of a decree. In the first two cases the
Court has the discretion to insist upon security
being furnished by the plaintiff to compensate
the defendant in the event of it being found that
the arrest was wrongful and was sought and
obtained maliciously or in bad faith. The
claimant is liable in damages for wrongful
arrest. This practice of insisting upon security
being furnished by the party seeking arrest of the
ship is followed in the United States, Japan and
other countries. The reason for the rule is that a
wrongful arrest can cause irreparable loss and
damages to the shipowner; and he should in that
event be compensated by the arresting party.
(See Arrest of Ships by Hill, Soehring, Hosoi
and Helmer, 1985)".
36. In Halsbury’s Laws of England, the nature of
action in rem and the nature of action in personam is
stated to be as below:
310. Nature of actions in rem and actions in
personam. An action in rem is an action
against the ship itself, but the view that if the
owners of the vessel do not enter an appearance
to the suit in order to defend their property no
personal liability can be established against them
has recently been questioned. It has been stated
that, if the defendant enters an appearance, an
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action in rem becomes, or continues also as, an
action in personam; but the Admiralty
jurisdiction of the High Court may now in all
cases be invoked by an action in personam,
although this is subject to certain restrictions in
the case of collision and similar cases, except
where the defendant submits or agrees to submit
to the jurisdiction of the Court.
The foundation of an action in rem is the
lien resulting from the personal liability of the
owner of the res. Thus an action in rem cannot
be brought to recover damages for injury caused
to a ship by the malicious act of the master of
the defendant’s ship, or for damage done at a
time when the ship was in the control of third
parties by reason of compulsory requisition. On
the other hand, in several cases, ships allowed
by their owners to be in the possession and
control of charterers have been successfully
proceeded against to enforce liens which arose
whilst the ships were in control of such third
parties.
The defendant in an Admiralty action in
personam is liable, as in other actions in the
High Court, for the full amount of the plaintiff’s
proved claim. Equally in an action in rem a
defendant who appears is now liable for the full
amount of the judgment even though it exceeds
the vale of the res or of the bail provided. The
right to recovery of damages may however be
affected by the right of the defendant to the
benefit of statutory provisions relating to
limitation of liability."
In M.V. AL Quamar (supra) this Court spoke of two attributes of
maritime lien as noticed herein before. The International Convention for
Unification of Certain Rules relating to Maritime Liens and Mortgages at
Brussels in 1967 defined the maritime lien to be as below :
a. wages and other sums due to the master, officers and other
members of the vessel’s complement in respect of their
employment on the vessel;
b. port, canal and other waterways and pilotage dues;
c. claims against the owner in respect of loss of life or personal
injury occurring, whether on land or on water, in direct
connection with the operation of the vessel;
d. claims against the owner based on tort and not capable of being
based on contract, in respect of loss of or damage to property
occurring, whether on land or on water in direct connection
with the operation of the vessel;
e. claims for salvage, wreck removal and contribution in general
average.
Incidentally, the Admiralty Court Act, 1861, read with the
International Convention for Unification of Certain Rules relating to
Maritime Liens and Mortgages, Brussels, 1926 read with Brussels Arrest (Of
Seagoing Ships) Convention 1952 and Brussels Maritime Liens Convention
1967 clearly indicate that a claim arising out of an agreement relating to the
use and/or hire of the ship although a maritime claim would not be liable to
be classified as maritime lien. (See in this context Thomas on Maritime
Liens).
Mr. Sampath, learned Senior Advocate with all the emphasis in his
command contended that the breach of the agreement in the facts of the
matter under consideration cannot but be ascribed to be a maritime lien,
whereas Mr. Sundaram, learned Senior Advocate appearing for the
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respondents rather strongly refuted the same and contended that even
assuming that there was in fact an agreement in existence between the
respondent and the disponent owner, question of there being a maritime lien
by reason of the breach of such an agreement does not and cannot arise
We have in this judgment herein before dealt with the attributes of
maritime lien. But simply stated maritime lien can be said to exist or
restricted to in the event of (a) damage done by a ship; (b) salvage; (c)
seamen’s and master’s wages; (d) master’s disbursement; and (e) bottomry;
and in the event a maritime lien exists in the aforesaid five circumstances, a
right in rem is said to exist. Otherwise, a right in personam exists for any
claim that may arise out of a contract.
Mr. Sampath did place very strong reliance on to the fixture note and
contended that the document itself cannot but be termed to be a concluded
contract relying upon the maritime lien. Upon reliance thereon, Mr.
Sampath contended that the fixture note contains all the particulars and has
been issued after the completion of negotiations and upon acceptance of the
terms and conditions, by reason whereof the fixture note is final and the
same binds not only the parties to the agreement but also the vessel.
Incidentally, the fixture note stands issued by the Japanese Company (Taiyo
Senpaku Kaisha Ltd.) through its agent in Malaysia, M/s Oriental Shipping
Corporation.
Further on the issue, we find Thomas on Maritime Liens stated it to
represent a small cluster of claims which arise either out of services rendered
to a maritime res or from damage done to a res and listed five several heads
of maritime liens as under :
(a) Damage done by a ship
(b) Salvage
(c) Seamen’s wages
(d) Master’s wages and disbursements
(e) Bottomry and Respondentia
The limited applicability of such a lien thus well illustrates that not
every kind of service or every kind of damage which arises in connection
with a ship gives rise to a maritime lien. We, however, hasten to add that
this is apart from the statutory enactments which may further list out various
other forms of maritime liens. In the Ripon City [(1897) P. 226, 246],
Gorrel Barnes, J. upon appreciation of this facet of a maritime lien and also,
in part, to the surrounding policy considerations observed :
". A maritime lien travels with the vessel into
whosoever possession it comes, so that an innocent purchaser
of a ship may find his property subject to claims which exist
prior to the date of his purchase, unless the lien is lost by laches
or the claim is one which is barred by the Statutes of
Limitation. This rule is stated in The Bold Buccleugh to be
deduced from the civil law, and, although it may be hard on an
innocent purchaser, if it did not exist a person who was owner
at the time a lien attached could defeat the lien by transfer if he
pleased."
As regards the issue of relationship between a maritime lien and
personal liability of a res owner, Thomas has the following further to state :
"The issue as to the relationship between a maritime lien
and the personal liability of a res owner is therefore one which
may fall to be answered differently as between individuals
maritime liens. It is clear that the various maritime liens do
not, in this regard, display common characteristics. The fact
that there exists this disparity may in turn be a symptom of the
absence of any clearly defined theoretical framework in the
development of the law relating to maritime liens. It is also
note-worthy that the emphasis on personal liability is most
clearly established in relation to the damage and disbursement
maritime liens which were the last in point of time to be
established."
As regards the merits of the matter presently, Mr. A.T.M. Sampath,
commented that the factum of contract between the parties was clearly
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admitted by the agent of the respondent vessel in its counter dated 24.6.1996
in Application No. 1147 of 1996. The admission of the Vessel is as
follows:-
"As per the contract between the plaintiff and the
respondent dated 20.10.95 there is absolutely no provision for
payment of 24% interest in the case of any delayed shipment".
It is in this context it has been contended that the respondent vessel
never disclosed the owner of the vessel in the written statement and reply
statement and as a matter of fact till date the respondent vessel did not
disclose who is actually contesting the case. For the first time in the cross
examination they marked the "Lloyd’s Maritime Directory" of the year 1998
and in which the owner of the vessel has been shown as one Pambridge
Maritime Inc., Panama City. Only in the Additional Written Statement for
the first time it has been stated that the owner is in Hongkong, but even the
name of the owner was not disclosed. The records depict that the respondent
vessel filed a power of attorney before the trial court. In which Skarrup
Management of Hongkong gave power of attorney in favour of one PC
Thilak and Venkatachalam. The above said Venkatachalam filed the counter
in O.A. No. 1147 of 1996. But P.C. Thilak the other power of attorney
subsequently filed a reply statement, in which he has stated that the
admission made by the other power agent is without getting the instruction
from the owner and without knowing the fact that they are not the parties to
the document but yet the respondent vessel did not disclose as to the owner
of the vessel.
Further reliance was placed on the decision of this Court in Nagindas
Ramdas v. Dalpatram Ichharam alias Brijram & Ors. (1974 (1) SCC 242),
wherein this Court in paragraph 27 stated as regards the admissions of
pleading the following :
"..Admissions in pleadings or judicial admissions,
admissible under Section 58 of the Evidence Act, made by the
parties or their agents at or before the hearing of the case, stand
on a higher footing than evidentiary admissions. The former
class of admissions are fully binding on the party that makes
them and constitute a waiver of proof. They by themselves can
be made the foundation of the rights of the parties. On the
other hand, evidentiary admissions which are receivable at the
trial as evidence, are by themselves, not conclusive. They can
be shown to be wrong."
In continuation of his submission as regards the fixture note it has
been the definite submission of Mr. Sampath that the Japanese Company
cannot but be said to be the disponent owner of the vessel M.V. WON FU
and, however, thus leads us to the next issue as regards the maintainability of
the suit upon an assumption that the latter has been the disponent owner.
Black’s Law Dictionary (7th Edition) illustrates the meaning of ’dispone’
being available in Scot’s Law and means to grant or to convey. It is on this
score, Order XLII Rule 2 of the Original Side Rules of the Madras High
Court has been referred to, which reads as below :
"A suit shall be instituted by a plaint drawn up,
subscribed and verified according to the provisions of the code,
save that if the suit is in rem, the defendants may, subject to
such variations as the circumstances may require, be described
as "the owners and parties interested in the vessel" or other
property proceeded against instead of by name."
Mr. Sampath contended that the suit is filed under the admiralty
jurisdiction in rem in the Original Side of the High Court of Judicature at
Madras and not in personam since the respondent vessel as per the fixture
note was bound to make itself available in Tuticorin Port and the laycan time
was fixed as 25th October-5th November to load 8,000 MTs and the
destination was Taiwan. The buyer of the cargo is San-I-Mining, Taiwan.
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The appellant informed the same to his buyer immediately after entering of
the agreement with Taiyo in Ex.P.2 dated 26.10.1995. Further it has been
stated that in order to avoid demurrage, the cargo was transported from the
appellant’s stockyard to the local clearing and forwarding agent M/s Lotus
Marine Shipping Clearing and Forwarding Agent’s stockyard near the Port
and thus it is a duty incumbent of the Charterer to be ready with the cargo
near the stockyard for immediate shipment. It has been contended that once
the contract was entered between the parties and the ship is available for
shipment of the cargo, it is the bounden duty and obligation under the
contract for the owners and master of the vessel to make available of the
ship as agreed in the contract and any breach, if occasioned, would entitle
the Charterer to claim damages for the loss. In the present case the ship is
within the territorial water of India. The ship is unloading iron cargo at
Madras Port as per appellant’s agent’s information to the appellant. The
appellant informed the same to his buyer in Taiwan in Ex.P2 on 26.10.1995.
The appellant when waited for the ship to reach the Tuticorin Port to load his
cargo, he received the message, the copy of fax message sent to the
disponent owner from his agent in Malaysia in Ex.P.3 dated 27.10.1995
stating that the respondent vessel is dropping the business and it contains
further information that if the vessel did not perform this contract it would
result in serious consequences.
Mr. Sampath contended that the appellant immediately filed the suit
on 30.10.95 under the admiralty jurisdiction in rem and the order of arrest
was passed on 1.11.1995 and the ship was arrested on 2.11.1995. One
Skarupp Management, Hongkong entered appearance through its counsel
M/s King & Patridge. (But no affidavit of interest was filed as enumerated
in the Original Side Rules and this came to the knowledge of the appellant
only when the appellant filed a petition to peruse the records at the time of
trial.) To release the vessel, a bank guarantee was given and the ship left
the jurisdiction of India upon furnishing security for the release.
It is on this score very strong emphasis has been laid on the decision
of this Court in M.V. Elisabeth (supra). Special attention has been drawn
to paragraph 44 of the Report in M.V. Elisabeth which reads as below :
"The vital significance and distinguishing feature of an
admiralty action in rem is that this jurisdiction can be assumed
by the coastal authorities in respect of any maritime claim by
arrest of the ship, irrespective of the nationality of the ship or
that of its owners, or the place of business or domicile or
residence of its owners or the place where the cause of action
arose wholly or in part."
In para 44 of M.V. Elisabeth (supra) it has been further observed as
follows :
".. In admiralty the vessel has a juridical personality,
an almost corporate capacity, having not only rights but
liabilities (sometimes distinct from those of the owner) which
may be enforced by process and decree against the vessel,
binding upon the world, for admiralty in appropriate cases
administers remedies in rem, i.e. against the party
personally."
It is submitted that in the present case the respondent vessel entered
appearance through its counsel but the affidavit of interest by the owner of
the vessel was not filed and the respondent vessel without disclosing its
owner contested the case. Again emphasis should be made to the fact that
Skarrup Management of Hongkong filed a power of attorney in favour of
two persons jointly and severally. In the course of the cross-examination of
the PW.1 for the first time the respondent vessel produced Lloyd’s Maritime
Directory Ex.D1 and claimed that one Pambridge Maritime Inc., of Panama
City was the owner in the year 1998. But in the additional written
statement filed by the respondent vessel on 30.7.1998 in para 2 it has been
stated as follows :
"It is submitted that the aforementioned counter affidavit
was filed in reply to the plaintiff’s applications for amendment
when the Defendant’s agents in Chennai did not have complete
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instructions from the defendant who is at Hongkong."
The additional written statement and the Lloyd"s Maritime Directory
are of the same year 1998. But in the additional written statement there is
no mentioning that the respondent is at Panama City. The Lloyd’s Maritime
Directory of the year 2000 did not contain the name of M.V. Won Fu. The
book is published every year. Even the author of the book did not guarantee
its authenticity.
The power of attorney of Skarupp Management after the disposal of
the O.S.A. filed a petition seeking the permission of the High Court
permitting the respondent’s counsel to withdraw the amount, for the sole
reason that the order of the High Court in C.S. No.1693 of 1995 is that the
money, which is lying in the fixed deposit in the credit of the suit, should be
refunded to the respondent vessel. As per the order of the High Court the
money can be paid only in favour of Pambridge Maritime Inc. In the
application seeking the permission of the Court to permit the respondent’s
counsel to withdraw the amount once again it has been stated that the owner
is in Hongkong. Thus, the suit is contested without disclosing the ownership
of the respondent vessel before the Lower Court as well as before this Court.
Thus the suit is stated to be contested in rem and not in personam.
Mr. C.A. Sundaram, Senior Advocate, appearing for the respondent,
on the other hand very strongly contended that even assuming that an
agreement had come into effect between the owner and the disponent owner,
but unless the charter was by demise, whereby the possession and control of
the vessel has to be given to the disponent owner, question of enforcing the
same in an action in rem and against the res would be rather futile.
Incidentally, this aspect of the matter, namely, the action in personam and
the action in rem has been rather elaborately dealt with in M.V. Elisabeth
(supra) as also in M.V. AL Quamar (supra).
Even, however, assuming the agreement has in fact been entered into
by the disponent owner, unless sufficient evidence is laid that the charter
was by demise, whereby the possession and control of the vessel was given
to the disponent owner, question of pursuing the cause of action against the
vessel would not arise. Needless to add that charter parties are of three
kinds; (a) Demise Charter; (b) Voyage Charter; and (c) Time Charter.
Whereas in demise charter, the vessel is given to the charterer who thereafter
takes complete control of the vessel including manning the same, in both
voyage charter and time charter, master and crew are engaged by the owner
who act under owner’s instructions but under the charterer’s directions.
Simply put, voyage charter is making available the vessel for use of carriage
for a particular voyage and the time charter correspondingly is where the
vessel is made available for carriage of cargo for a fixed period of time. In
the contextual facts, apart from the fixture note, no other documentary
support is available as to whether ownership arose through a charter by
demise and possession and control of the vessel has already been given to
the disponent owner. The facts disclose that the disponent was an intending
charterer of the vessel from the owner and it is on expectancy of such a
contract, the fixture note was issued. There was as a matter of fact no
charter party or agreement with the charterer and some eventuality in future
is stated to be the basis of the cause of action. It is on this score we think it
expedient to record that even upon assumption of the appellant’s case at its
highest, no credence can be attached thereto. The disponent owner was not a
demise charterer but it is on the happening of such an event in futuro that
such a fixture note has been issued. In our view there is no sufficient
evidence available as regards the action in rem making the vessel liable in
the contract said to have been entered into, as recorded in the fixture note.
It is in the nature of a breach of contract and liability of the vessel would not
arise, though however, we are not expressing any opinion as regards the
maintainability of an action in personam or its eventual success.
Inasmuch as the claim in the present case arises out of contract de
hors a maritime lien, no action in rem is permissible, neither a suit in the
original jurisdiction of the Madras High Court can be maintained against the
vessel.
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On the wake of the aforesaid, this appeal fails and is dismissed,
without, however, any prejudice to initiate further action in personam. No
costs.