Maritime Law Notes Caro + Hanne
Maritime Law Notes Caro + Hanne
Maritime Law Notes Caro + Hanne
common law
end of contract:
performance / expiration / termination / frustration / force majeure / vitiating factors
Tort
Tort – claim based not on a contract
Intentional tort / strict liability tort / negligent tort
Force Majeure:
- event that seriously impacts the parties ability to perform the obligations of the contract
- natural disasters, war, pandamics
Damages:
- compensation for parties losses due to breach of contract
- fault needs to be proven -> causal link or damage is foreseeable
- unliquidated: precise loss / liquidated: fixed by parties in contract / fair comensation for services
already provided
Remedies:
- can be requested if compensation of damage is insufficient
- can be specific performance / ending a contract / return of property
Privity of Contract:
- cannot impose obligations on thrid parties who are not part of the contract
- third parties can have rights under contract
Battle of Forms:
- ref to standard terms of a contract
- agree as per last shot principle
Signatures:
- siganture of right person important
- only legal + binding if signed by right person
- director or other authorised person
Capacity:
- legal capacity = signed by right person / otherwise not legal or valid
English Tort Law
Sunday, December 4, 2022
4:36 PM
Intentional tort = substantial knowledge that action would result into harm
Strict liability tort = focus on physical aspect of wrongful act and focus on liability caused due to their
action not on whether or not it is their fault
Key Elements
Duty of care
- harm = reasonably foreseeable
- proximity
- fair, just and reasonable to impose liability
Causation
- would have the damage/loss occurred without the tortfeasor
Harm or Injury
- personal injury / financial loss
- sentimental value not represented
Remedies
- Damages – financial compensation
- Injunctions – tortfeasor prohibited from certain action / required to take certain action
Cargo Claims + Bill of Lading
Wednesday, November 2, 2022
11:45 AM
Cargo Claims
2 party contract
A – Shipper
B – Carrier
A reselling to C
Title to Sue
Choice of Law
Proving claimants loss
Carriers breach
Carriers defences
3 main functions
Receipt / evidence of contract / document of title
To order – needs to endorse
Consignees name must be stated in the BL / or endorsed to her
Barer: who ever receives them
- liable
- defences
- any bars to the carriers exemption
- limit his liability
Carriers defences
- Time bar – 1 year (loss for the claimant)
- Carrier has burden of proof
Charter Parties
Wednesday, November 2, 2022
3:12 PM
Introduction of Charterparties
Charter parties are often being combined
Ownership
- Registered owner
- Disponent owner
Seaworthiness
- condition / manning / fit to carry cargo / owner must provide vsl in fit condition
- sources defining seaworthiness: shelltime / barecon / hague visby rules art 3 / case law
- If vsl not seaworthy: claim damages / cancel the charter party / terminate the charter party
Off Hire:
- defined in CP
- applies regardless of owners involvement / fault
- liquidated damages but not breach of CP
- calc depending on CP
Voyage charter – pays for use of ship for one or more voyage
Freight
- charterers obliged to pay for freight (lumpsum / pmt pcbm)
- due of delivery of cargo / depening on CP
- no right of deduction
- Deadfreight: compensation for freight that would have been earned if full cargo would have been
loaded
Laytime / Demurrage
- Laytime: starts when vsl has arrived at load port + NOR tendered (in accordance with CP) + vsl is ready
to load
- demurrage: damages for delay which shall be paid for owners without proof of loss
- to be calculated per day or pro rata
- demurrage must be presented within short period otherwise can be time barred
Despatch
- applicable if less laytime is being used – chrts entitled to compensation
- 50 % of demurrage
- no righ under common law – only if stated in CP
Contracts / Letters of Credit / Financing
Sunday, December 4, 2022
4:17 PM
Contracts in international documentary sale
Letter of Credit:
- law to be chose for LC = setting out all terms and obligations of LC
- All documents which must be tendered by seller must be listed in LC
- Credit must be conform with sales contract
- Buyers and sellers bank correspond within the jurisdiction
- LC must be accepted – once accepted it is the only available method of payment for this transaction
- Buyer must strictly comply with instructions otherwise the documents will not be handed out = no
goods
--> Strict compliance: all documents must STRICTLY comply with the requirements
--> Strict compliance means: seller: absolute assurance of payment if it delivers conforming documents –
for buyer: absolute assurance that the documents comply with the sales contract
Bank:
- can decide within 5 banking days to pay or not to pay
- cannot extend period
-bank must follow verbatim the procedure reg notices / rejecting of documents etc
- if bank does not reject the docs = it has to pay
Fraud:
- there must be clear evidence of fraud
- clear notice of evidence of fraud
- bank awareness of fraud must be timely
Benefits of LC:
- security for both parties
- seller has greater assurance of payment
- seller protected against litigation abroad
- LC provide liquidity to buyer
- Bank is secured through BL
S&P of Ships & Newbuilds
Sunday, December 4, 2022
4:17 PM
Newbuilding:
Selected standard forms:
o SAJ form: shipbuilders association of Japan form
o AWES: association of european shipbuilders and shiprepairs form
o Norwegian form: norwegian standard form of shipbuilding contract
o NEWBUILCON: BIMCO standard newbuilding contract
Heavily amended standard form:
Internal conflicts
Inconsistency
Interpretation issues
Main aspects of the newbuilding:
Predelivery: inspection
o The buyer has the right to have its representative on board the ship during sea trials.
The buyer may choose whether to accept or reject the newbuilding
Delivery of vessel:
o Important for the buyers arrangement such as:
Chartering commitments
Registration
Insurance
Financing
o Right place:
Sellers place
Most often at the shipyard
Breach of contract:
o Warranties under the contract
Express warranties
Implied warranties
o Regulates whether defects of the ship may be the builders fault.
Breach of the contract:
Breach of a term gives the innocent part different remedies.
Important to distinguish the terms of the contract between
o Conditions
o Warranty
o Intermediate term
Secondhand vessels:
Newbuilding vs. Second-hand vessel:
Newbuilding:
Operating costs are often lower than for older vessels
Ensuring agreed performance of contract is of very high importance
Typically more expensive than second-hand vessels
Requires substantial efforts with regard to securing financing
Secondhand-vessels:
Operating costs increase with age
Quicker to acquire
Often cheaper than newbuildings
Higher maintenance costs
Contract negotiation and closing:
The parties and the vessel (NSF 2012, clause 7):
Offer and acceptance
Buyer's objective
o Vessel in good condition
Sellers objective:
o Receive timely payment of highest purchase price
Entire agreement clause:
Clause 18:
Deposit and purchase price (clause 1,2,3):
Failure to pay gives right to cancel and claim compensation of losses and expenses.
Joint escrow account:
o Nominated: law firm or brokers
o Escrow agreement
Inspection (clause 4,6,11):
Before or after signing
Divers inspection/drydocking
o Free of class conditions
Delivery and notice of readiness:
Time and place for delivery
Sellers shall provide NOR:
o Ship is at place of delivery
o Ship is physically ready
Tender of NOR triggers payment obligations
Title and encumbranes (clause 9):
Buyer wants clean title
Seller wants clean break I.e. no liability after delivery
Bill of sale transfers title
Breach of contract:
Buyers default:
o Sellers keep deposit
o Sellers can claim damages
Sellers default:
o Buyers can cancel agreement
o Buyers can claim damages
Documentation and closing:
Documentation is provided in clause 8 or in an addendum
Sellers documentation is the most burdensome
Buyers documentation ensure validity of contract and party.
Registration of ship and mortgage:
Vessel (and any mortgage) is deleted from sellers registration
Vessel (and any mortgage) is registered in buyers name
Closing procedure:
Litigation / Mediation / Arbitration
Sunday, December 4, 2022
4:17 PM
Governing Law / Jurisdiction
- can change entire case
- Where to dispute can have effect
Liability in tort
- civil liability based on wrongdoing of one party
- negligence vs intentional act
Contractual liability
- contract not fulfilled
Settlement
- commercial relationship
- negotiations without prejudice
- based on strength of evidence / enforcement of judgements / cost and timespan
Mediation
- decision cannot be imposed
- focus on finding soloution
- easier to maintain good relationship
- mediators correspondence with parties is not regulated
Litigation
Jurisdiction
- courts respect parties choice of jurisdiction
- Forum-non-conveniens: acknowledgement that another forum / court is more applicable = change of
court
- If no agreement for law: brussels convention will decide
- General rule: defendants should be sue at their domicile
- Exceptions: place of performance / place of harmful event / consumer rules / real estate
- Lis pendens – if claim is submitted to one court it cannot be change to other court
- Res judicata – same matter cannot be brought to trial twice
Choice of Law:
- if no law has been agreed Rome I or Rome II regulation will apply (in most EU countries)
- Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations and Non Contractual Obligations (UK)
- Rome I applies to contractual claims and Rome II applies to non contractual claims
Enforecement
- judgement typically bilateral treaty or multilateral international convention between enforcing state
and judgement state
- within EU = brussels I regulation (art 39) allows enforcement of judgements
Enforcement / Mortgages / Maritime Lien
Sunday, December 4, 2022
4:17 PM
Mortgages
Rights in personam
- rights against specific persons – claim for payment
Rights in rem
- Rights relating to a thing / property
Mortgages
- registered security against an asset
- security for repayment
- assets of considerable value
- in bankruptcy – mortgagees are secured
- financing bank has 1st priority
- its registered in the flag states registry
Maritime Lien
- security interest over an asset to secure payment of a claim
- rights against the ship itself
Ranking
1 claims secured by maritime liens
2 claims secured by registered mortgage
3 unsecured claims, including maritime claims not secured by liens
Claim: argument that person is seeking type of reimbursement / payment / or compensation under
contract or because of injury or somebodys negligence
Maritime Claim:
- all claims in relation to which a ship may be arrested
- defined in arrest convention
- Special regime covering enforcement against ships – ship is being perceived as a legal person
- ship arrest and maritime liens are both parts of this regime
Arrest:
- detention of vessel to secure a maritime claim / forced sale of ship
- interim measure and MUST be followed by court proceedings
Freezing Injunctions
- aimed at securing funds for satisfaction of a legal right
- in order to prevent a defendant from taking actions
- burden of proof on applicant
Legal Compliance / Risk MGMT
Sunday, December 4, 2022
4:17 PM
Why is trade compliance important for shipping companies?
Ship recycling:
Ship recycling transactions:
Ship recycling and scrapping is an integral part of the shipping insutry and usually conentrated in
developing stages.
Vessels are typically sold to a "cash buyer" who contracts directly with recycling yard and
handles documentation.
Contract terms vary, but often standard contracts are used as Norwegian Salesform 1993 with
amendments and BIMCO standard contract Recyclecon
Legal framework:
Ship recycling regulation – focus on movement of waste:
Basel convention:
o 184 parties, incl. The main shipbreaking nations in south asia, excl. USA
o Prohibits transboundary movement of hazardous waste to or from non-parties to the
convention and non OECD-states.
o Restrictions on the transboundary movement of waste to/from/through party states
o Obligations to notify the state of export and the state of import of transboundary
movement of all wastes between parties to the convention
Ships are not specific category of waste, which means that the general
categories and rules apply.
EU waste regulation:
o Implements the Basel convention within the EU
o Prohibits transboundary movement of hazardous waste from EU countries to non-OECD
countries and lays down for controlling waste shipment borders.
Ship recycling regulation – focus on flag state and recycling operations:
EU regulation on ship recycling:
o Applies to vessels of no less than 500 gross tonnage operating between diff. States
o Flying the flag of an EU member state (overall recycling requirement) and
o For ships flying the flag of a third country at EU ports (must keep an IHM)
Notification requirement to the member state 14 days prior to recycling of the ship
Most Hong Kong convention rules on ship recycling are adopted
Ship recycling facilities must be authorised by the european commision to recycle ships
o Currently only nine facilities outside EU has been approved by the european commission
and added to the european list (8 in turkey, 1 in USA).
o Also a requirement that vessel specific ship recycling plan is produced.
Ship recycling regulation:
Hong Kong convention:
o Will apply to vessels larger than 500 GT entitled to fly the flag of contracting states
o Vessels must be recycled at an authorised ship recycling facility only.
The authorised ship recycling facilities must comply with certain standards for
environmentally sound ship recycling and must produce a vessel-specific ship
recycling plan
o The convention is not yet in force
o IHM is being adopted in industry
o BIMCO's recyclecon incorporates many of the requirements of the convention
IMO guidelines
o Recommended best practice for recycling – but only recommendations, not enforceable.
The international legal regimes:
Status 2020; Flag and waste management rules:
Responsible parties:
Exporter/importer typically the owner of the vessel at time of transfer. Disposer is the facility
"generator means any person whose activity produces hazardous wastes or other wastes or, if
that person is not the person who is in possesion and/or control of those wastes (BC Art 2 (18))
Risk that a seller of a vessel is deemed to be "waste generator" (when vessel is to be recycled)
Practical problem relating to waste shipment rules:
Difficult to determine when owners are found to have "intention" to recycle
Very cumbersonne, costly and time-consuming procedure
o Requirement to provide bank guarantee (for cost of recovery operations) and filling out
detailed forms.
o Process (consent from export, transit and import states) does often take severak
months.
o Movements of the vessel are, in principle, restricted to the jurisdiction during the
process.
o Owners have economic interest in avoiding – as they often do – the application of the
rules.
Competition law compliance:
How does competition benefit society?
o Customer are offered the best products and services at the lowest prices
o Resources are allocated to the companies that perform best
The rules
o The Treaty for the Functioning of the EU; EU Regulations; Commission Guidelines
The authorities
-The European Court of Justice decides on EU law disputes, including competition law
•Vertical
•Horizontal
•Horizontal agreements are often more likely to affect trade than vertical agreements
4.it must not be possibleto eliminate competition for a substantial part of the productsin
question
De minimis-exemption: Market share < 10% (horizontal agreements), or < 15% (vertical
agreements) –unlessprice fixing, output limitation, forms of customer and market sharing
Block exemption for liner shipping consortia (Regulation 906/2009) àmarket share < 30%
Abuse of dominant position
TFEU Article 102 :
•Abuse may be relevant in relation to ports, where (near-) monopolies can easily arise
•Under one market definition, a port could be dominant in a substantial part of the common
market and therefore subject to Article 102, but the same port might not be in a dominant
position under a different geographical market definition.
A product market covers such products and services, which are regarded as substitutable by the
consumers due to the products characteristic’s, their prices and their intended use
•“The banana has certain characteristics, appearance, taste, softness, seedlessness, easy
handling, a constant level of production which enables it to satisfy the constant needs of an
important section of the population, consisting of the very young, the old, and the sick”
EU merger regulation – stopping market dominance:
EU Regulation 139/2004
Prohibits concentrations of businesses with a community dimension, which impedes effective
competition by creating a dominant position
“Concentration”
“Community dimension”
The concentration must have a certain minimum turnover (worldwide and EU)
“The purpose of this Agreement is to authorize the parties to share vessels with one another in
the Trade (as hereinafter defined) and to authorize the parties to enter into cooperative working
arrangements in connection therewith.”
-The parties contribute vessel capacity, incl. e.g. deployment of newbuildings and e.g.
withdrawal
-Ports, rotation, speed and schedule are agreed. Repositioning costs shared pro rata
-Network centre (NC) manages vessels and schedule and can blank sailings or propose extra
loader. NC monitors bunker performance and settles slot transactions
-Slot capacity allocation for each party on each service and trade lane. Slots may be traded
between parties anonymously with NC as “broker” –and if not possible, to third parties
-No transfer of sensitive information between the parties. They may agree on preferred bunker
ports
•The p3 network was approved by the US authorities on 24 March 2014
•In June 2014, the European Commission informed the parties that it has decided not to open
an investigation into the P3 network
•Reduces competition on the liner shipping routes between Europe and Asia
State aid
State aid is prohibitedif it distorts competition, art. 107. The form of aid is irrelevantas long as a
company is affordedan advantage that distorts competition
Exemptions
Port cases: When determining if public service contracts involve state aid, proportionality and
cost effectiveness of the public service is key
Anti-cirruption compliance:
The cost of corruption can be divided into four main categories: political, economic,
social and environmental
Transparency International Corruptions Perceptions Index 2018
•The act of giving or receiving something of value in exchange for some kind of influence or
action in return, that you were otherwise not entitled to
•Example: Paying a government official to include you in a public tender offer that you were not
qualified to be included in
•The act of giving or receiving something of value in order to expedite an action (“a routine
governmental action”), that you were entitled to
•Example: Paying a government official to process your visa faster than the normal procedure
prescribes
Sanctions compliance:
Sanctions
Foreign policy instruments imposed with the aim of changing behaviour of the target by non-
military means, i.e. trade embargo
Export/import bans and bans on provision of specific services, asset freezes, prohibitions on
payments, investments and capital movements, arms embargoes, travel/visa bans
Penalties for breach of sanctions
•In the EU: fines, but not as massive as in the U.S., and potentially prison sentence
•Each member state sets out the penalty for breach in national law
•In Denmark breach of sanctions are penalized pursuant to the Danish Criminal Code section
110
EU has implemented restrictive measures against the below countries (per 25 May 2022)
Who must observe the US sanctions and comply with the sanctions?
(iv)Secondary sanctions.
U.S. sanctions may apply for trade in goods and technology, which contain U.S. components, or
when a transaction is carried out in U.S. dollars.
OFAC:
(i)A Non-Exhaustive List of Vessels that Delivered Oil to Syria in 2016-2018; and
(ii)A Non-Exhaustive List of Vessels which have Engaged in STS Transfers of Petroleum Destined
for Syria in 2016-2019.
•Vessels that have been designated as blocked property pursuant to U.S. sanctions regulations
are identified on the SDN-list.
•Even though not listed on a sanctions list, it may still have extensive consequences for
shipownersthat their vessel is named on the list.
EU blocking statute:
Consequences of breach:
Sanctions checklist
−Reflected on the sanctions lists maintained by the UN, EU and US (i.e. SDN-List)
3.Is there a risk that our operation is covered by the prohibited acts and/or is connected to the
countries/persons targeted?
Marine Insurance
Sunday, December 4, 2022
4:17 PM
Marine insurance types:
Protection and indemnity (P&I):
o Covers the vessels liabilities towards third parties. Covers limited areas IWL cover.
Hull and machinery
o Covers damage to the vessel and its machinery.
Cargo insurance
o Taken out by sellers/buyers of goods to cover the amoubt not covered by the ships P&I
(limited pursuant to the Hague visby rules)
Anchillary cover
o Kidnap and ransom, war risk, loss of hire etc.
Insurance providers:
Protection and indemnity:
o Mutual Insurance clubs or fixed facility (commercial) insurers.
o Hull and machineary
o Cargo insurance
Marine Insurance Act 1906:
"A contract whereby the underwriter undertakes to indemnify the assured in a manner and to
the extent thereby agreed, against marine losses -> meaning the losses incident to marine
adventure" (MIA section 1).
Subject to contract -> parties may agree otherwise
Policy wording will always be the starting point for analysing an insurance claim.
Insurance Act 2015:
The insurance Act 2015 was enacted in order to replace the Marine Insurance Act 1906 which was
favouring the insurer to the detriment of the insured. It distinguishes between "consumer" and "non-
consumer" insurance contracts.
Deals with (virtually) any kind of insurance (only in part with consumer insurance contracts).
Introduces certain new concepts and requirements mainly on the part of the insurer (not simply
codification of case law).
Repealed in part the MIA
Subject to contract is also "disadvantageous terms"; which is terms putting the insured in a
worse position than under IA, (most be drawn to insureds attention in order to be in valid).
General principles of marine insurance:
Insurable interest:
o The assured must have an "insurable interest"
If not the contract is void and will be treated like it never existed (MIA section
4).
o How and who?
Ownership
Owner
o Possession together with right of enjoyment
Time, voyage or BB charter.
o Duties/obligations in respect of the subject matter
Technical manager
Commercial manager
o Various security interests
Bank with a mortgage upon the vessel
The duties of fair presentation (IA) and utmost good faith (MIA):
The duty of fair presentation (IA) - what is "fair presentation" :
o IA section 3 (1): "Before a contract of insurance is entered into, the insured must make
to the insurer a fair presentation of the risk"
o IA section 3 (3): "A fair presentation of the risk is one..."
B: which makes that disclosure in a manner which would be reasonably clear
and accessible to a prudent insurer, and
C: in which every material representation as to a matter of fact is substantially
correct, and every material representation as to a matter of expectation or belief
is made in good faith.
The duty of fair presentation (IA) - when to disclose?:
o Obligation to disclose exists up until conclusion of the contract (pre-contractual)
o However, no duty to disclose in certain situations:
IA section 3 (5): "in the absense of enquiry, subsection (4) does not require the
insured to disclose a circumstance if";
(A): it diminishes the risk
(B): the insurer knows it
(C): the insurer ought to know it
(D): the insurer is presumed to know it, or
(E): it is something as to which the insurer waives information
The duty of fair presentation (IA): - what to disclose? ('deemed full disclosure')
o IA section 3 (4):
"The disclosure required is as follows
(a) disclosure of every material circumstances which the insured knows or ought
to know
(b): failing that, disclosure which gives the insurer sufficient information to put a
prudent insurer (a theoretical insurer who needs to know all the material facts before
entering into a contract of insurance) on notice that it needs to make further
enquiries for the purpose of revealing those material circumstances"
Material circumstances:
Physical hazards (the risk)
Moral hazards (the insured person/company).
The duty of fair presentation (IA) - test of materiality:
o Would the fact be of interest to a prudent insurer writing risks in the market and would
it ultimately have caused a prudent insurer to decline the risk or increase premium (test
of materiality?)
o Objective test (I.e. whether an insurer in general would consider it material).
The duty of fair presentation (IA) - test of inducement:
o The insurers must prove that they were indured/convinced to enter into the contract by
the manner in which the risk was presented by the assured (misrepresentation of
facts)/or by the non-disclosure of material circumstances (test of inducement)
o Subjective test (must be shown that the insurer was in fact induced)
The duty of fair representation / Remedy for breach:
o Remedies for failure to fairly represent the risks are avaliable to the insurer if (I) the
non-disclosure was material and (ii) the insurer was induced by that non-disclosure.
o Schedule 1 to IA ("Insurers' remedies for qualifying breaches")
Section 2 "Reckless or deliberate breaches -> insurer may avoid contract and
keep premiums
Section 3: Other breaches -> "proportionate remedies"
Where the insurer would have declined the risk altogehther, the policy
can be avoided, with a return of premium
Where the insurer would have accepted the risk but included a
contractual term, the contract should be treated as if it included that
term
Where the insurer would charge a greater premium the claim should be
scaled down proporionately.
Coverage – incl losses (1 / 2):
o MIA section 55 -> defines incl. And excl. Losses
1: Subject to the provisions of this actm and unless the policy otherwise provides, the
insurer is liable for any loss proximately caused by a peril insured against.
o Any loss: that is both partial and total loss
o Total loss: defined negatively in MIA section 56 as "any loss other than a total loss, as herinafter
defined, is a partial loss". Total loss can be defined either as:
1: "actual total loss" (ALT) -> where the ship/cargo is destroyed that it can no longer be
said to be a ship/cargo).
2: "constructive total loss" (CTL) -> the insured informs the insurer that it wants to
abandon the subject matter – the purpose is salvage
o MIA section 55 defines incl. And excl. Losses:
1: subject to the provisions of this act and unless the policy otherwise provides, the
insurer is liable for any loss proximately casued by a peril insured against.
o "Perils": risks and dangers (I.e. that it must be covered by an actual insurance made)
o "Proximate cause" is the primary cause of a injury -> "proximately = primarily"
The primiary reason/the efficient cause for the loss must be a peril covered by the
insurance
Hull and machinery:
Loss of or damage to the ship (+ collision liability)
Primarily a property damage insurance
Covers (institute/international hull clauses)
o Losses in case the vessel suffers damage (cover for repair costs)
o Losses in case the vessel becomes a total loss
o Loss of or damage to the vessel caused by any governmental authority acting to prevent
or mitigate a pollution hazard
o 75% collission liability
o Losses from marine perils whether or not assured has exercised due diligence
o Losses from marine perils where the assured has acted with due diligence
Institute/international hull clauses:
o Institute hull clauses 1983 and 1995
o International hull clauses 2033
Losses from marine perils whether or not assured has exercised due diligence:
Perils of the sea, rivers, lakes
Fire, explosion, violent theft, piracy, contact with land installations, earthquake,
contact with aircraft.
o Losses from marine perils where the assured has acted with due dilligence (insured burden of
proof).
Bursting of boilers or breakage of shafts (not repair costs)
Latent defects in the machineary or hull
Negigence of master, officers, crew or pilots
Negligence of repairers or chrts.
Barratry of master, officers or crew
Perils of the sea:
o Rule 7 in MIA 1906 schedule on construction
"Perils of the sea refers only to fortuitous accident or caualties of the sea. It does not
include the ordinary action of the winds and waves".
o The cendor Mopu
There can be loss by perils of the seas even if such sea condition where ordinary and
foreseeable and/or expected.
Loss covered if threre is a fortuitous unexpected accident or casualty as an extraordinary
result of the wind and waves.
P&I clubs:
o Agreement to share own and other members risks by premium/calls.
o P&I are non profit making associations financed by its members.
- Civil claims
- Public scrutiny
- Class investigations
- Criminal sanctions
- 1910 convention
- fault base
Principles of Liability:
- one at fault, cover all loss
Defences Available
- inevitable accident
- contributory negligence
- agony of the moment
2. Limitation of Liability
- LLMC 1996
- based on vessel size / GT
- Shipowners + salvors can limit their liability
3. Salvage
- any act or activity
- assist a vessel – not applicable for off shore platform
- salvage of human life – no salvation award -> entitle fair share of salvage reward
- vessel in 'danger'
-> no clear definition of danger
- if no help was sufficient – no cure no pay -> no salvage award
Salvage agreement
- can be altered
- can be entered by the captain
Maritime Lien
- security has to be satisfactory
4. General Average
- arrangement of sharing financial consequences
- loss shared by all parties involved
- York Antwerp Rules
- cargo jettison
Rules fulfilled
- extraordinary sacrifice
- intentional / reasonably
- unintentionally
- common safety of the voyage
Calculation:
- Expenditures / Contributory value / split by parties involved
exemption as per charter party
5. Towage
- several acts considered to be towage
- also in connection with salvage
- contractual or non-contractual (towcon / towhire)
- towage – have a contract, renumeration on certain basis, not same priority as salvage
- salvage – more valuable, contractual basis, based on what actually saved, creates
maritime lien
Shipping incident
collision, grounding, everything related to the vessel
- Strict liability vs Fault based liability
Pool net revenue:
Pool points:
o They are used for fx young vessels that doesn't burn that much fuel -> so that the
vessel/vessels that "perform" the best in the pool also gets most out of it.
2. Agency based pool (POOLCON B):
Here it's the pool manager who employees the vessel, as if they were his own.
Owner has to take care of the insurance
Joint venture:
Fx if a commercial and financial company merge -> they can use eachothers expertise.
Umbrella term for many diff. Setup
Usually;
o 2 or more parties establish a jointly owned JV company.
o JV agreement governs the participants relationsship.