Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 152South Africa
Van Niekerk v MV "Madiba 1" (AC13/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 152 (15 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
15 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Van Niekerk v MV "Madiba 1" (AC13/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 152 (15 August 2022)
Van Niekerk v MV "Madiba 1" (AC13/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 152 (15 August 2022)
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sino date 15 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
(Exercising
its admiralty jurisdiction)
Case
No. AC13/2018
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Date
of (online) hearing: 15 August 2022
Date
of judgment: 15 August 2022
Name
of ship: MV
Madiba 1
In
the matter between:
ANDRE
VAN
NIEKERK
Plaintiff/Respondent
and
THE
MV “MADIBA
1”
Defendant/Applicant
JUDGMENT
(Application
for leave to appeal)
BINNS-WARD
J:
[1]
The owner
of the MV
Madiba
1
has
applied for leave to appeal against this court’s judgment
dismissing its application to amend its plea in the action
in
rem
instituted by a creditor of Meltt (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)
(‘Meltt’).
[1]
It is
alleged in the particulars of claim that Meltt was the charterer by
demise of the vessel when it incurred the debt that gave
rise to the
maritime claim.
[2]
The arrest of the vessel for the purpose of the action
in rem
was effected in terms of s 3(4)(b) of the Admiralty Jurisdiction
Regulation Act 105 of 1983 (‘the AJRA’), which is
quoted
in para 2 of the principal judgment. Section 3(4)(b) contemplates the
arrest of a vessel for the purpose of instituting
an action
in rem
in circumstances in which
the owner of the property to be arrested
would be liable to the claimant in an action
in personam
in
respect of the maritime claim concerned.
[3]
The plaintiff’s maritime claim does not lie against the owner
of
the vessel, it lies against Meltt, allegedly the demise charterer
of the vessel. The plaintiff was nonetheless able to rely on the
provisions of s 3(4)(b) of the AJRA to institute proceedings against
the vessel by virtue of the deeming provision in s 1(3) of
the Act,
which provides:
‘
For the purposes
of an action
in rem
, a charterer by demise shall be deemed to
be, or to have been, the owner of the ship for the period of the
charter by demise.’
[4]
As recorded
in the principal judgment,
[2]
it
was common ground that the evident object of s 1(3) of the AJRA was
to give effect domestically to art. 3(4) of the International
Convention Relating to the Arrest of Sea-going Ships (Arrest
Convention), 1952.
[3]
The
principal judgment relates that equivalent legislation is to be found
in other maritime jurisdictions internationally.
[4]
[5]
The policy
considerations informing the adoption of such legislation and the
practical effect of the pertinent provisions were discussed
in
The
“Chem Orchid”
[2015] SGHC 50
; [2015] 2 Lloyds Rep. 666, and rehearsed at some
length in this court’s principal judgment.
[5]
As pointed out in the principal judgment, the interpretation of s
1(3) adopted by this court is consistent with the construction
of the
provision in all the previous South African reported cases in which
the import of the deeming provision has been considered.
The South
African jurisprudence has construed s 1(3) of the AJRA to consistent
effect with the equivalent, albeit differently worded,
statutory
provisions found in other maritime jurisdictions. It is an
interpretation that has allayed the concerns expressed by
various
academic commentators shortly after the insertion of s 1(3) into the
AJRA in 2000 about the possible far-reaching consequences
of
construing the provision to make the demise charterer the actual
owner’s proprietary substitute; something that they all
agree
cannot have been intended by the lawgiver.
[6]
[6]
The
interpretative approach adopted by this court (and in the other South
African judgments in which s 1(3) has been considered)
is consistent
with that stated as follows by Brandon J (as Lord Brandon then was)
in
The
Andrea Ursula
[1973] QB 265
[7]
at 270-1 (a
case with interesting parallels concerning the construction of
domestic legislation to give effect to art. 3(4) of
the Arrest
Convention): ‘
Recent
decisions of the Court of Appeal show that, where the meaning of an
English statute intended to give effect to an international
convention to which the UK is signatory is not clear, the court can
and should look at the terms of the convention to assist it
in
construing the statute; and further that, having done so, the court
should so construe the statute as to give effect, so far
as possible,
to the presumption that Parliament intended to fulfil, rather than
break, its international obligations.
Salomon
v Customs and Excise Commissioners
[1967] 2 QB 116
;
Post
Office v Estuary Radio Ltd
[1968] 2 QB 740.
... I turn accordingly, to consider the relevant
provisions of the International Convention relating to the Arrest of
Sea-going
Vessels
(sic)
,
and the provisions of the Act of 1956 intended, or apparently
intended, to give effect to them.
’
(South Africa, like Singapore and Australia, was not a signatory to
the Arrest Convention but, as already noted, it is common
ground that
art. 3(4) of the Convention was the begetter of s 1(3) of the AJRA.
The evident legislative object was to bring this
country’s
admiralty jurisdiction rules into line with those widely applicable
internationally.)
[7]
As
explained in the passage from
The
“Chem Orchid”
[2015] SGHC 50
; [2015] 2 Lloyds Rep. 666 quoted in the principal
judgement,
[8]
the object of art
3(4) of the Arrest Convention was to put the actual owner of a vessel
at risk in respect of the maritime claims
of creditors of the demise
charterers of the vessel. It is to give such creditors a right to
proceed
in
rem
against the vessel as if it were the property of the charterer; a
remedy the creditors did not enjoy before the introduction of
provisions such as s 1(3) of the AJRA and its international
equivalents. This consideration informed this court’s finding
that s 1(3) of the AJRA accordingly has nothing to do with
transferring any of the proprietary incidents of ownership from the
actual owner to charterer. It is about attaching risk, not
transferring rights. As Mr
Wragge
SC for the vessel owner indeed conceded in his argument of the
application for leave to appeal, s 1(3) is in essence a purely
jurisdictional provision, widening the previously more circumscribed
circumstances in which a vessel can be liable to arrest for
the
purpose of instituting proceedings
in
rem
;
cf.
Taxidiotiki-Touristiki-Nautiliaki
Limited (t/a Aspida Travel) v The Owners and/or Demise Charterers of
the Vessel ‘Columbus’
[2021] EWHC 310
(Admlty) (18 February 2021) para 2 (in relation to
the equivalent UK statutory provision).
[8]
Both of the
special pleas that the defendant sought to introduce by way of the
intended amendments to its plea
[9]
relied on a construction of s 1(3) that would equate Meltt with the
owner of the vessel for the purpose of insolvency law. It is
a
construction that for all practical purposes would result in the
characterisation of the vessel, for insolvency and company winding
up
purposes (hence the vessel-owner’s invocation of s 359(1)(b) of
the 1973 Companies Act), as if it were the property of
the company in
liquidation, rather than that of the actual owner. That is obviously
a paradoxical position for any actual owner
to adopt. But, as
observed in the principal judgment,
[10]
it is a position taken not with any concern for the
concursus
creditorum
in Meltt’s liquidation, or the orderly winding up of that
company (which Mr
Wragge
stressed was the object of 359(1) of the 1973 Companies Act), but
only to seek to exempt its own property (the
res
)
from the risk created by s 1(3) of the AJRA, and to thereby render
the institution of the action
in
rem
against
its
(ie
the actual owner’s) vessel incompetent. The owner’s
position predicates a construction of the provision that would
defeat
the sub-section’s very object, viz to render the actual owner’s
property liable to attachment as security for
the demise charterer’s
debt. (The vessel-owner sought support for its approach in the
judgments in
Rennie
N.O. v South African Sea Products (Pty) Ltd
1986 (2) SA 138
(C) and
The
Nantai Princess
1997 (2) SA 580
(D), but, as explained in the principal judgment,
[11]
those matters, which pre-dated s 1(3) and did not involve maritime
claims against the demise charterers of the vessels concerned,
were
fundamentally distinguishable. In both those cases the relevant
companies were the actual owners of the
res
[12]
and were in the process of liquidation at the time of the institution
of the proceedings
in
rem
.)
[9]
The
determinant criterion in this application for leave to appeal is
whether the owner of the vessel has persuaded me to form the
opinion
that (i) the contemplated appeal would have a reasonable prospect of
success; or (ii) there is some other compelling reason
why the appeal
should be heard, including conflicting judgments on the matter under
consideration.
[13]
[10]
In
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021), to which Mr
Wragge
referred
in argument, the appeal court held ‘
The
test of reasonable prospects of success postulates a dispassionate
decision based on the facts and the law that a court of appeal
could
reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of the trial
court. In other words, the appellants in this matter need
to convince
this Court on proper grounds that they have prospects of success on
appeal. Those prospects of success must not be
remote, but there must
exist a reasonable chance of succeeding. A sound rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects
of success must be shown to
exist
.’
[14]
I am unable in this matter to find a sound rational basis for
concluding that there is a reasonable prospect that another court
would, on appeal, adopt the construction of s 1(3) of the AJRA or s
359(1)(b) of the 1973 Companies Act that would be necessary
to give
the vessel-owner’s proposed amendments traction as
unexcipiable.
[11]
I am also not persuaded that there is any other compelling reason to
grant leave to appeal.
There are no conflicting judgments in point.
On the contrary, the weight of authority lies against giving s 1(3)
the import contended
for by the vessel-owner.
[12]
Mr
Wragge
submitted, however, that a good reason to grant leave to appeal was
that the legal questions presented by the vessel owner’s
intended amendments were
res
nova
.
He is correct that there is no precedent in a case on all fours with
this one. But the fact that an obviously bad point has not
previously
been raised and rejected does not afford a compelling reason for the
court of first instance to grant leave to appeal
when such a point is
first raised and predictably rejected. In
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
[2020] ZASCA 17
(25 March
2020); 2020 (5) SA 35
(SCA), which also
concerned an application for leave to appeal, Cachalia JA observed ‘
A
compelling reason includes an important question of law or a discreet
issue of public importance that will have an effect on future
disputes. But here too, the merits remain vitally important and are
often decisive.
[The applicant]
must
satisfy this court that it has met this threshold
’
[15]
.
In my judgment, the vessel owner has failed to meet the required
threshold.
[13]
The application for leave to appeal is consequently refused with
costs.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
Appearances:
Applicant’s
counsel:
M. Wragge SC
J.D. Mackenzie
Applicant’s
attorneys:
Webber Wentzel
Cape Town
Plaintiff
/ Respondent’s counsel:
P.A. Van Eeden SC
Plaintiff
/ Respondent’s attorneys:
Bowman Gilfillan Inc.
Cape Town
## [1]Van
Niekerk v The MV "Madiba 1”[2022]
ZAWCHC 125 (17 June 2022).
[1]
Van
Niekerk v The MV "Madiba 1”
[2022]
ZAWCHC 125 (17 June 2022).
[2]
In para 16.
[3]
The
relevant text of the 1952 Arrest Convention is quoted in para 16 of
the principal judgment, in note 5.
[4]
In para 11, in note 3, where the equivalent provisions in the United
Kingdom, Singapore and Australia are described.
[5]
In para 22-23, in particular.
[6]
See
para 11 and 13 of the principal judgment.
[7]
Medway
Drydock & Engineering Co. Ltd. v M.V. Andrea Ursula
.
[8]
In para 22.
[9]
The intended amendments are set out in para 4 of the principal
judgment.
[10]
In para 8.
[11]
In para 7.
[12]
The
arrested property in
The
Nantai Princess
was not a vessel, but certain cargo on board a vessel.
[13]
Section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[14]
In
para 10.
[15]
In
para 2, footnote omitted.
sino noindex
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