Tetley (2002) introduction to conflict of laws 5


OBLIGATORY FORUM COURT STATUTES (SHIPOWNERS’ LIMITATIONS)



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OBLIGATORY FORUM COURT STATUTES (SHIPOWNERS’ LIMITATIONS)


Limitation of ship-owners’ liability is a universal concept amongst shipping nations and recognizes the perilous nature of maritime transport, particularly as it was in the past. Limitation permits a ship-owner, whether with respect to liability arising from collision, allision, grounding, cargo damage, death or personal injury, to claim a limit upon his damages and was originally devised to promote shipping. Today social necessity and value questionable but unlikely to be abolished. Has been subject to scrutiny and extended to international conventions on pollution and noxious substances.
An ancient principle invented when it was thought that the world was flat. Says that if there is a disaster the ship-owner is not responsible for any more then the amount that is left. You could abandon a ship or what was left of it and only be responsible for what was left – in some shipwrecks they used to just leave the ships there when it cost more to pull them out then leave them there, so the government would have to haul them out and blow them up, then charge the owners for it.
Again, one of the problems is that the United States has not adopted these conventions.

    1. Limitations in the Common and Civil Law


Common Law (by statute) per ton - In common law countries, shipowners' limitation of liability is exclusively the product of statute – characterized, with the exception of the USA, by a limit based upon (a) the tonnage of a ship and (b) the value of the ship before the liability-producing event. Adopted in Limitation Convention, 1924 – adopted by most of the countries in the world but not the United States – responsible for dollar value times the tonnage of your ship.
Civil Law (by lex maritima) based on abandonment, like US - In the civil law, there were two theories of limitation: abandonment (a ship-owner, while personally liable, was able to absolve himself of all claims by relinquishing his ship as well as any pending freight - best associated with France), and execution (the ship-owner was not personally liable; instead in rem claims were launched against the ship and pending freight, and these claimants received priority by virtue of maritime liens). You could abandon and walk away from a wreck and the ship would bear all the debts.
Note: The ship-owner may only limit as above if there is no “fault or privity” on his part. The master or other servants may be at fault, however. If there is fault or if the ship-owner is privy to the fault then he cannot used these principles. Principle from a case involving Guinness Beer.

    1. Conflict Problems & Solutions


  • Originally the law of a ship collision and all surrounding matters such as limitation were subject to the lex loci, including the right to limit and the size of the fund.

  • Two main problems: (1) to determine which law would provide the right to invoke the limitation; and (2) which law would govern the size of the limitation fund itself.

  • Solutions have normally been: (a) the right to limit was seen as substantive and to be governed by the same law which determined the responsibility for the collision; (b) the actual size of the fund was characterized as a matter of procedure, to be decided by the lex fori.

  • This modern division between the right to limit and the procedural fund has problems. There are not merely two choice of law problems, but often many, including law of responsibility, law of presumptions, law of divisions of damages, laws applicable to contracts or claimants, law applicable in tort for persons against non-carrying ship, PEL, law of right to limit and calculation of fund, law of marshalling and distribution of fund. Must also consider if there is a better forum – each issue may have its own applicable law.



      1. Conflict Directives in International Limitation Conventions


1924 Limitation Convention – compromise between abandonment and responsibility based on tonnage

  1. per ton and abandonment;

  2. only ship-owner may limit – to value of ship and freight after event or to a sum equal to 8 sterling per ton plus an additional 8 sterling in cases of personal injury or wrongful death

  3. "actual fault or privity of the ship-owner" loses the right to limit.

National laws determined procedure and time limits for rules on arrest of ships and giving of security. However, could not affect the modes of procedure employed in national laws (if procedure widely enough defined, this convention would not apply). Applied where the ship is a national of a contracting state, but do not have to apply them where ship is a national of a non-contracting state.
Important because at this time there was no U.N. or other international body – maritime convention adopted this internally through various groups within the countries. It represents more or less a treaty saying that you could abandon your ship once you paid the appropriate amount for the tonnage.
1957 Limitation Convention

  1. per ton;

  2. ship-owner, charterer, manager and operator, master and crew may limit;

  3. “actual fault or privity" of any of the above, loses their right to limit – lex fori determines who has BoP

Changed everything because allowed the charterer and others to limit and Canada adopted it. Allows one limit for property damage and another for personal injury and death, with both limits based on tonnage. Rules relating to size and distribution of fund and all procedures governed by national laws of the state in which the fund is constituted. Law of the contracting state governs procedure and time limits. France, UK and Canada became parties, but not US.
1976 Limitation Convention

(This is an obligatory forum court statute. This act applies in any federal court, doesn't matter where event occurs)



  1. per ton (sliding scale)

  2. ship-owner, charterer, operator, manager, insurer and salvor and preposes may limit;

  3. The right to limit is only lost by a personal act or omission, done with intent to cause damage or recklessly with knowledge that damage would probably result. (This is a major change. Comes from Warsaw Convention, and Tetley feels it is unacceptable.)

Even more advanced limitation. Added salvor because of specific case where ship blew up… Procedures relating to limitation where no fund has been constituted decided by the law of the contracting state where the action is brought. Creation and distribution of the fund and any relevant procedure is decided by the law of the state where the fund is constituted (more limited then 1957). Applicable whenever proceedings taken before the court of a State party, but each State may exclude from the application of the Convention: person seeking limitation who is not ordinarily a resident or who has no principle place of business in a State party, and any ship which does not fly the flag of a State party at the time this Convention is invoked. UK and France are parties, but US is not. See below for Canada.
2001 Marine Liability Act (CB p. 255)

    • Also included these ideas in this act – gave force of law to the 1976 Limitation Convention as amend by 1996 Protocol.

    • It repealed and replaced the Canada Shipping Act provisions enacted by the Act to amend the Canada Shipping Act (maritime liability), 1998.


1976 Limitation Convention and the 1996 Protocol

  1. retains the use of maximum liability derived from tonnage

  2. the persons who may limit include shipowners, salvors, charterers, managers, operators, preposes, the vessel and insures of sea-going trips

  3. Convention is applicable whenever limitation proceedings are taken before the court of a state party.

Law for most of the world is at least the ’76 Convention and for some the ’96 Protocol except for the U.S. This is important for U.S/Canada relations on Great Lakes – see below. The Protocol increases the limits.

      1. National Laws


U.K. – 1976 Convention with 1996 Protocol (Merchant Shipping Act 1979 sect. 17(1) gives the force of law in the U.K. to the 1976 Convention – this is an obligatory forum court statute applicable to all ship-owners’ limitation cases, including cases arising out of collisions in foreign territorial waters, regardless of the flags of the ships or the nationality of the parties or any other factors); in general, measure or quantification of damages is procedural but, the limitation of damages in tort has, however, generally been determined by a combination of the lex loci delicti and the lex fori, in accordance with the double actionability rule; ship-owners' liability – both the right and the calculation of the fund have been governed by English maritime law, regardless of the place of the casualty. See above for more details. It’s up to date like Canada.
Canada – 1957 Convention. Distinction made between substance and procedure with the limitation of liability being procedural as part of the quantification of damages and the right to limit being substantive. Canada also has the Marine Liability Act, 2001…which has brought them more up to date.
1976 Limitation Convention and 1996 Protocol and in Canada, S.C. 1998, c. 6 and in the U.K., etc.

  • Article 1 – sets out the general possibility to limit liability according to this convention for ship-owners, charterers and managers

  • Article 11 – You can only have a fund in a state party and the fund must be created according to the rules of the limitation convention.

  • Article 14 - Governing law: Subject to the provisions of this Chapter the rules relating to the constitution and distribution of a limitation fund, and all rules of procedure in connection therewith, shall be governed by the law of the State Party in which the fund is constituted.

  • Article 15 - 1. This Convention shall apply whenever any person referred to in Article 1 seeks to limit his liability before the Court of a State party or seeks to procure the release of a ship or other property or the discharge of any security given within the jurisdiction of any such State. Obligatory forum court statute, applies in countries which have adopted the statute.


France – 1976 Limitation Convention for both international and internal waters. France has not yet put the more modern ideas into place. Problems with determining whether law of responsibility will be same as that of limitation of liability.
U.S. – 1851 Shipowners' Limitation Act (in its time it was revolutionary but it is now in need of modernization):

  1. abandonment, only the value of the vessel (and earned freight) after the event – pay whatever its worth after the event…this eliminates fund where there is total loss

  2. plus $420 per ton for death and personal injury;

  3. only shipowner or demise charterer (where you take the ship but owner can name crew – still pays for everything) may limit – no difference in 1851 between demise and bareboat charterer (bareboat vs. demise charterer – bareboat means you name the crew and demise you don’t name the crew)

  4. 6 months after written notice of complaint to file a limitation (strictly construed)

  5. "privity or knowledge" rarely applied by American courts and appear stricter than “actual fault or privity rules of ’24 and ’57 Limitation Conventions

  6. insurance proceeds do not fall into the limitation fund (very archaic – widows orphans don’t get access to insurance proceeds of owners)

A summary of U.S. conflicts law on limitation of shipowners' liability indicates an inconsistent practice, based on divergent theories. There is a preoccupation with the differences between substance and procedure which is in need of modernization. The First Restatement called for the lex fori, the Restatement Second called for the proper law of "each issue" in tort, which would include the proper law of the limitation. The Restatement Second, unfortunately, was not followed. Both the Titanic and the Norwalk Victory are inconsistent conundrums giving varying rules, which have been followed and rejected in subsequent decisions.


In most, cases, in any event, American courts have managed to apply U.S. law, i.e. the lex fori both in respect of right to and size of limitation fund (Korean Wonis One). Norwalk seemed to note that if a foreign substantive law best governed a tort, and an integral link was found between that law and a foreign limitation statute, it should be applied (in comparison with a limitation law of a procedural nature…). These decisions also fail to recognize the idea of depecage (more than just two laws). These decisions were accepted in many of the following cases. American courts also refused to recognize foreign limitations procedures and decrees, with the result that there may be two funds, as in Bethlehem Steel – these courts have failed to invoke FNC where appropriate, although this was done in the Arctic Explorer.
Rome Convention 1980, article 7(2)

    • Convention does not restrict application of obligatory forum court statutes – application of mandatory rules irrespective of the proper law of contract

    • CCQ – 3129 isn’t a general application of this rule because it only applies to raw materials – can it be extended?

    • 3076 CCQ also could be considered another option – but isn’t a very good one


Rome II

Nothing in this Regulation shall restrict the application of the rules of the law of the forum in a situation where they are mandatory irrespective if the law otherwise applicable to the non-contractual obligation.


      1. Conflict Limitation Cases


Limitation may be raised:

1) As a defense - as per Arctic Explorer -

2) By petition
Concursus”

After the limitation fund has been constituted, the district court issues an injunction to stay all proceedings against the owner or his property with respect to the casualty concerned. This "concursus" requires all claims resulting from the incident to be filed and disposed of in a single proceeding, although the concursus has effect only within the U.S. and does not preclude claimants from suing in other countries. This is formally in maritime law but also found in US District Courts in some matters.


The following three decisions were rendered relatively correctly in the US and Canada. They relied on the substantive/procedure distinction but realized that damages had a proper law.

        1. Bethlehem Steel, 1978


Facts: US ship (The Steelton) while navigating Canadian waters struck a bridge – prevented ships from proceeding up/down St. Lawrence Seaway for a number of days – the US owner of the ship claimed limitation of liability in Canada and deposited $$ into the Canadian limitation of liability fund – claimants took proceedings in Canada and US (shipowner took limitation proceeding in US as well) – argument over size/value of limitation fund – 3 decisions rendered in US, 1 in Canada

Holding/Ratio:

a) First Decision of US District Court – Canadian law was applied to the right to limit liability because the right of a shipowner to limit under the Canada Shipping Act was deemed substantive, connected with heads of damage. Size of the fund calculated by American law because were deemed procedural.

b) Decision of the Federal Court of Canada – the law to determine liability in tort cases was deemed to be the lex loci delicti commissi (i.e. the law of Canada), no claims for pure economic loss were allowed under Canadian law which applied to this allision case in Canada; it was properly assumed that Canadian law applies to the right to limit liability, a Canadian limitation fund was created under Canadian law – shipowner could recover from CAN fund any funds it had paid out of US fund for claims that would have been valid in Canada (assume CAN governs fund).

c) Second Decision of US District Court – Canadian law of damages was applied to an allision in Canadian waters, held that there was no claim for economic loss, also held that there was no “overriding domestic policy” to apply US law.



e) Decision of the 6th Circuit – Held that Canadian law of damages (and of economic loss) applies to an allision in Canadian waters even by a US flag ship.


  • Tetley – “a better solution” – The court correctly found that the proper law of the claims for damages and for economic loss was Canadian. The proper law of the right to limit was also Canadian. The proper law of the fund was Canadian as well, there being a closer and more real connection to Canada. Thus the US court applying forum non conveniens should have stayed the American action and had the claim tried in Canada with a Canadian fund and Canadian distribution under Canadian law.



        1. Arctic Explorer, 1984 AMC 2413.


Facts: Canadian ship - event/deaths in Canada but chartered by a US corporation - Canadian coast guard investigated - charterer took petition for limitation in Texas, owners took petition in Nova Scotia (but also in Texas) - charterer (leased ship) lived in Texas, wanted to sue in Texas because under US law charterer cannot limit liability unless a demise charterer (he was a time charterer) – 13 little suits in Texas. Basically: 1 event, many claimants, each sue in different courts, can all be brought to a single court?

Holding/Ratio: Conditional dismissal

  • Issue: Was right to limit liability (of time charterer) under Canadian law or no right under US law.

  • Held: Canadian law applies, at least with regards to right to limit.

  • Concursus – permitted to force all 13 suits into federal court. Arctic Explorer had not entered US – if it had, would have been considered doing business in US.

  • Right to limit is substantive, closest and most real connection, and interest analysis – law of CAN held to be applicable to rights and liabilities in the sinking, based on Lauritzen/Rhoditis factors and because there were no substantial contacts with US.

  • Right of a time charterer to limit was held to be substantive and subject to Canadian law.

  • Size of the fund is procedural? Fund probably of the forum (so Canada too) once sent back.

  • Forum non conveniens - held should go back to Canada on basis of forum non conveniens, no interest to have it in US (analysis), even though in Canada right to compensation limited, no substantial contact with base of operations so dismissed on basis of forum non conveniens.

  • Tetley: "The result in the Arctic Explorer is very satisfying, although a more rational and more consistent reasoning could have been made by the use of a methodology, such as the one suggested in Chapter II".


Dismissal or stay? Tetley prefers stays over dismissals because stays make it easier to bring back into court – acts as a hold/pause on the case while dismissals means there is no more recourse. Sending it by forum non conveniens elsewhere – keeping the case open in case it goes back. Better to ask for a stay with conditions attached to the forum non conveniens – in this case it was simply dismissed
13 seamen were drowned and the attorney’s realized that the charterers were American so went and got all widows to sign up and they sued in Texas where charters had head office. If American law applies then can charters limit? These were only time charterers and not demise charterers so if American law applies charterers would have to pay full amount. Had 13 different actions, but went to every little town and had one suit in every little court. There were 3 motions – concursus to bring all motions together into one suit this was held. The court decided that this was not the convenient forum because American law should not apply under Lauritzen.
Note: Canadian law has strict rules with respect to workmen’s compensation (get it automatically without lawyers but get what employee gets). Another problem was depecage with respect to limitation – the right to limit and the size of the fund could be under different laws.
Three basic American cases on choice of law – Romero, Rhoditis, Lauritzen. Public interest vs. private interest? Public interest is interest analysis of the government while private interest is that of the parties. Interest analysis should be limited to the former.
It’s contradictory to claim forum non conveniens and a limitation claim – which one do you want? It’s not bad faith to demand a limitation.

Discuss Canada Shipping Act, s.649, which provides for limitation to apply to the charterer of the ship and any person having interest in or possession of a ship from and including the launch thereof. U.S. does not permit a time charterer to limit liability but Canada does, therefore apply Canadian law…also because of above cases (Lauritzen, etc.). The court then discusses the contacts to be looked at – not a contact counting test. Private and public interest factors are considered here – the private factors are the contacts, while the public interest aspect is looked at through governmental interest analysis.


Forum non conveniens – another critical private interest is the courts ability to assert jurisdiction. In paragraph 32, the Court also impressed by the strong interest expressed by the Canadian government – the accident occurred on Canadian water with a Canadian flagged ship, etc. There is one American seaman – never a perfect case – why shouldn’t he have is day in American court?

        1. The M/V Swiborn, 1984


Facts: Two Korean ships, owned and operated by Koreans collided on the High Seas – US limitation fund would have been $9 million US but under Korean law limitation fund would have been $250,000 US – which law applies?

Holding/Ratio:

  • US District Court conceived of a two tier test – ceiling on liability would be fixed by US law and no foreign limit would be applied if higher.

  • If the foreign limit was lower than the US one then the court would proceed to consider whether the foreign limitation fund was attached to the ship-owners’ right to limit.

  • Court found that the calculation of the Korean fund was a right of the shipowner under Korean law and therefore substantive and should be recognized as the proper law being attached to the right to limit.

This is an example of the attempt to reconcile Titanic and Norwalk Victory. It arrives at a two-tier test that attempts to satisfy both decisions and then uses additional more logical reasoning to find the proper law and this arriving at the same conclusion. Tetley thinks it would have been better had the court determined the proper law of the right to limit and the proper law of the fund – the court did in fact apply Lauritzen and governmental interest analysis to find the proper law. Also, forum shopping was reason for suit in US, which should be discouraged.



        1. "The Lady Gwendolen" [1965] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 335 CA


Facts: Collision between Pt. motor vessel (The Lady Gwendolen) and Df. anchored motor vessel (Freshfield), in fog, in River Mersey - Claim by Pt to limit their admitted liability - Contentions by Df. that collision did not occur without Pt actual fault or privity in that plaintiffs: (1) (a) failed to instruct master to place considerations of safety above those of keeping schedule, or to see that such instructions were observed; and (b) failed to instruct master not to proceed at excessive speed in fog or to see that master complied with that instruction; and (2) (a) failed to ensure that master and/or mate were properly instructed in use of radar (including fact that radar did not entitle them to proceed at full speed in fog); and (b) failed to instruct master as to necessity of mate being on bridge when using radar - Evidence that master habitually proceeded at excessive speed in fog; that, at collision, master was alone on bridge with helmsman, with radar switched on; and that vessel was proceeding at full speed (10 knots), with engines on "stand-by".

Holding/Ratio:

  • Although plaintiffs' main business was that of brewers, in their capacity as shipowners they were to be judged by the standard of conduct of the ordinary reasonable shipowner in the management and control of vessels; that the primary concern of a shipowner was safety of life at sea, and that involved a seaworthy ship, properly manned and safely navigated.

  • Pt. had failed to prove that collision occurred without their actual fault or privity; and that, therefore, plaintiffs' appeal should be dismissed.



        1. Rhone (The) v. Peter A.B. Widener (The) [1993] 1 S.C.R. 497  


Facts: The moored ship (Rhône) struck by barge (Widener) in the Port of Montréal - both sustained damage - At time of the collision, Widener was being towed by four tugs - two owned by Great Lakes - Captain Kelch, on the tug Ohio, acted as de facto master of the flotilla - His navigational errors, compounded by a malfunction of the Ohio's towing apparatus, caused the collision - The owners of the Rhône sued the barge and the tug owners for damaging their ship and North Central, the owner of the barge, sued Great Lakes for breach of its towage contract. Great Lakes denied liability in both actions and counterclaimed for limitation of liability pursuant to s. 647(2) of the Canada Shipping Act

Issues on Appeal: (1) Is the captain of Great Lakes' tug Ohio a directing mind of Great Lakes by virtue of the fact that he exercised some discretion and performed some non-navigational functions as an incident of his employment? (2) Does s. 647(2) apply to limit Great Lakes' liability with respect to errors committed in the navigation of other vessels within the flotilla not owned by Great Lakes? (3) In the event that Great Lakes is entitled to limit its liability under the Canada Shipping Act, what vessels must be taken into account in determining the extent of its liability?

Holding/Ratio: Appeals should be allowed.

  • The collision between the Rhône and the Widener did not occur with the actual fault or privity of Great Lakes. While Captain Kelch was the master of the Ohio at the time of the collision, navigational errors committed by a ship's master, in the course of his duties, do not in themselves give rise to actual fault or privity on the part of the shipowner in the absence of a breach of its duty to supervise the management and navigation of its vessel which is causally linked to the resulting damage.

  • Further, there was no actual fault or privity on the part of Great Lakes on the basis that Captain Kelch was a directing mind of the corporation.

  • While Captain Kelch no doubt had certain decision-making authority on navigational matters as an incident of his role as master of the tug Ohio and was given important operational duties, he did not have governing authority over the management and operation of Great Lakes' tugs. This authority remained with his superior. The fact that his superior may have been lax in his supervision of Captain Kelch does not alter the fact that Kelch was essentially a servant of Great Lakes.

  • Great Lakes, as owner of the Ohio, may thus limit its liability since the cause of the collision consisted of acts or omissions of Captain Kelch on board the Ohio.



        1. N.V. Bureau Wijsmuller v. "Tojo Maru" [1971] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 341 HL


Facts: Salved vessel damaged by negligence of salvors’ diver working from salvors’ tug – claim by salvors to limit liability – question of fact whether there was a negligent act of diver (an “act on board”) or in the “management” of the salvors’ tug

Issues: (1) whether owners could counterclaim or whether arbitrator should have left contractors with some award in their favor after proper reduction for negligence of V.; (2) whether contractors could limit liability on grounds that act of V. was (a) act of "person on board" tug or (b) act "in the management" of tug (within setc. 503 of Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, as amended); and, if they could limit liability; (3) whether there was right of set-off between contractors' claim and owners' counterclaim, and, if so, whether right to limit applied before or after set-off.

Holding/Ratio:

  • There is no rule of maritime law that a successful salvor cannot be liable in damages to the owner for the result of any negligence on his part.

  • Damage done by a salvor in the course of a salvage operation was taken into account (i) by basing the salvage reward on a salved value reduced by the damage; and (ii) by deducting part or whole of the damage from the salvage reward; save to that extent, a salvor was not liable for damage done; but that principle applied only when the salvor did more good than harm; that, accordingly, if the salvor succeeded in effecting a cure then the operation must be regarded as a whole and the salvor was entitled to a reward calculated on the above principle; that, therefore, applying that principle to this case, the owners were not entitled to counterclaim damages for negligence

  • If the contractors were liable in damages to the owners, they could not limit their liability under setc. 503, in that the act of V. was neither done in the "management" of the tug nor was it an act or omission of a person "on board" the tug

  • Further, that if the contractors were liable in damages and were entitled to limit liability, then the owners were not entitled to a set-off before limitation of liability was applied

  • Further, that if the contractors were liable in damages without any limitation of liability, the reward should first be calculated as if no damage had been done by their negligence; then the counterclaim should be calculated on the cost of repairs, delay and loss of profit, and then a balance should be struck;


        1. Caltex Singapore v. BP Shipping Ltd. [1996] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 286 QBD (Adm Ct)


Facts: In Singapore waters the defendants' vessel British Skill collided with the plaintiffs' jetty causing considerable damage - first plaintiff, Caltex Singapore Pte. Ltd. (Caltex Singapore) owned and operated the jetty, the second plaintiff Caltex Trading Pte. Ltd. (Caltex Trading) used it and the third plaintiff Caltex Services Pte. Ltd. (Caltex Services) performed administrative functions to facilitate and coordinate the operations of the various Caltex companies in Singapore - The plaintiffs' claim was estimated at U.S.$10.5 m - BP had admitted liability for the collisions in limitation proceedings which it had commenced in Singapore.

Holding/Ratio:

  • The limit of liability in Singapore was likely to be less than the limit of liability in England and the defendants (BP) applied for a stay of the action on the ground that the plaintiffs' claims should be heard and determined in Singapore.

  • Under s. 272 of the Singapore Merchant Shipping Act, 1970 a shipowner was entitled to limit his liability for damages to an aggregate amount not exceeding in the currency of Singapore the equivalent of 1000 gold francs per ton provided that he proved that the relevant damage was caused without his actual fault or privity. Section 272 was in material respects the same as s. 503 of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1894 and thus gave effect to the International Convention relating to the Limitation of Liability of Owners of Sea-going Ships, 1957 (the 1957 Convention).

  • In England s. 503 was replaced by s. 17 of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1979 which provided that parts of the Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Claims,1976 (the 1976 Convention) should have the force of law in the United Kingdom. Under the 1976 Convention the limit of liability was significantly greater than the 1957 Convention but it was much more difficult for a claimant to break the limit. The plaintiffs contended that if they had to claim in Singapore they would be unable to recover the difference between their claim of U.S.$10.5 m. and the Singapore limit of about U.S.$5.8 m. They argued that in that event they would be deprived of a substantial legitimate juridical advantage.

  • For the defendants it was submitted that there was no relevant advantage to the plaintiffs proceeding in England because the Singapore limit would be applied as part of the lex loci delicti.

  • The plaintiffs argued that the English Court would not apply the Singapore limit because English law characterized the limitation provisions of Singapore law as procedural; (b) it was sufficient for the plaintiffs to establish that the act or omission complained of was actionable or tortious by the lex loci delicti; and (c) the Court must apply the English limit and not the Singapore limit because the relevant part of the Convention had the force of law in England.

  • On the evidence BP had established that Singapore was the natural forum for the determination of the issues and distinctly more appropriate for the trial of the issues of fact between the parties and especially the issue of quantum.

  • the ends of justice would best be served if the plaintiffs were permitted to proceed in England; it was true that many countries had not ratified the 1976 Convention but it was desirable that as many countries as possible should apply the same standards; it was proper to regard the 1976 Convention as representing a widely accepted development from the regime which existed under the 1957 Convention.



        1. The 'Happy Fellow' [1997] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 130 QBD (Adm Ct)


Facts: Collision near the mouth of the Seine between the Darfur and Happy Fellow - occurred allegedly as a result of defective steering gear on board Darfur - Darfur was arrested at Le Havre by the Happy Fellow interests and on a writ was issued, by that writ full damages were claimed against the owners of Darfur - At time of the collision Darfur was under time charter to a company called Baco-Liner - Baco-Liner issued a writ in personam in England against the owners of Darfur claiming inter alia an indemnity in respect of any liability incurred by them in respect of salvage services rendered to Darfurand in respect of cargo on board which had to be discharged and reloaded as a result of the collision - Darfur accepted service of the writ next day and a few days later instituted a limitation action on behalf of the owners of Darfur as plaintiffs naming as the defendants the owners of Happy Fellow, the bareboat charterers of Happy Fellow, Baco-Liner and all other persons claiming or being entitled to claim damages by reason of the collision between Darfur and Happy Fellow – Pt. purported to constitute a limitation fund in England in the sum of 1.719 m pounds sterling – application for stay of proceedings.

Holding/Ratio:

  • Limitation action was a special proceeding to which all potential claimants were made parties and included a power to stay proceedings to enforce any judgments which might be obtained in other actions; in a multi-party situation a shipowners' right to limit was not an incident or attribute of a claimant's claim but an altogether different right to have all claims scaled down to their proportionate share of a limited fund

  • Shipowner's right to limit did not qualify or attach to the substantive right of the claimant but operated to limit the extent to which an unqualified right could be enforced against the limitation fund; the right to limit was procedural and did not affect the substantive rights of the French claimants; the English proceedings purported to invoke a right which was good against all possible claimants while the French proceedings sought only to invoke rights between the parties to those proceedings; the proceedings did not have the same 'object or cause', didn’t involve the same cause of action and art. 21 Convention had no application.





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