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US/Ukraine minerals deal: Digging into the detail
The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
(1) PST Energy 7 Shipping LLC and (2) Product Shipping & Trading S.A. .v. (1) O.W. Bunker Malta Ltd. and (2) ING Bank N.V. [2015] EWCA Civ 1058
Global | Publication | November 2015
Many readers will be aware of the continuing legal fall-out from the financial collapse of the OW Bunker group (OWB) in November 2014. In short, OWB was the world’s largest contractual supplier of bunkers to ships. The supplies were invariably made on credit terms of up to 60 days. Mostly, OWB used sub-contractors (the physical suppliers) to deliver the bunkers to customers’ ships. OWB’s standard terms of sale therefore included a retention of title (ROT) clause, clearly providing that the bunkers remained the property of OWB until payment in full was received, but authorising the buyer, as bailee of the product, to use the bunkers for the propulsion of the ship. Typically, all or most of the bunkers would have been consumed by the time payment was received by OWB. With a bunker supply often costing between US$0.5m and US$1.0m, and with buyers having the benefit of a 60-day credit period, OWB required a substantial financing line – in this case, from ING Bank. As security, ING took a charge over the English-law receivables of OWB (the debts due from OWB’s customers).
Until OWB collapsed, the physical suppliers had been content to rely on their evaluation of OWB’s creditworthiness. Some physical suppliers had also tried to elevate their delivery receipts (usually signed by the Chief Engineer of the receiving ship) into parallel supply contracts, by adding contractual wording. These attempts were not persuasive as a matter of English law, partly because Chief Engineers lack actual or ostensible authority to enter into bunker supply contracts, and partly because the purported parallel contracts could not be reconciled with the two pre-existing contracts (the OWB supply contract, and the sub-contract between OWB and the physical supplier). The physical suppliers have therefore resorted to claiming, in a very small number of suitable jurisdictions (such as Dubai), that the fact of supply created a maritime lien over the ship. Some shipowners, fearing that they might be forced to pay twice, have responded by denying liability to OWB. One such case (involving the ship Res Cogitans) has been the subject of an arbitration, followed by successive appeals to the High Court and the Court of Appeal in London. All three tribunals have held that the OWB supply contract is valid and enforceable.
Owners argued that the supply contract must entail a sale of goods within the meaning of the sale of Goods Act 1979 (SOGA). SOGA requires that the seller must have the right to sell the goods. If the seller is unable to pass title, a total failure of consideration pursuant to section 49(1) will usually arise, relieving the buyer of its obligation to pay. Owners contended that the sale price never became due, because OWB was unable to transfer property in the bunkers to the owners, having never paid its supplier and, therefore, did not have good title to transfer.
Although the supply contract described itself as a sale agreement, the Court refused to accept that the contract should necessarily be construed as a contract to which SOGA applied. The starting point must be an objective analysis of what the parties had actually agreed. On that basis, the Appeal Court agreed with the two previous tribunals, both of which held that title was largely irrelevant. Bunkers were supplied and the buyers, as bailees, were licensed to use them to propel the ship. That arrangement fulfilled the commercial needs of the parties. SOGA did not apply.
The Appeal Court decision has attracted criticisms from some shipowners and their insurers, some of which we paraphrase, as follows:
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The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
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