MT Argun v Master and Crew of the MT Argun and Others

JurisdictionSouth Africa
JudgeMarais JA, Farlam JA, Navsa JA, Cloete JA and Jones AJA
Judgment Date19 September 2002
Citation2004 (1) SA 1 (SCA)
Docket Number653/2002
Hearing Date16 May 2002
CounselM Wragge for the appellant. L Burger for the respondents.
CourtSupreme Court of Appeal

Farlam JA: A

Introduction

[1] This is an appeal from judgments delivered on 13 August 2002 and 12 September 2002 by Foxcroft J in the Cape Provincial Division of the High Court, sitting as a Court of Admiralty in terms of the Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation Act 105 of 1983 (to which I shall refer in what follows as 'the Act'). In the first judgment on appeal B the learned Judge dealt with two admiralty cases which were heard before him. The first was case No AC127/99, in which the master and crew who were serving on board the MT Argun when she arrived in Cape Town on 25 May 1999 claimed various amounts in an action in rem against the vessel in respect of wages due as at C various dates as well as interest and costs of repatriation. The master also claimed an amount in respect of work done and expenses incurred. In what follows the plaintiffs in case No AC127/99 will be referred to as 'the first respondents'. D

[2] The second case was case No 134/99. This was also an action in rem against the vessel. In this case the plaintiffs were the master and crew of the MT Argun who had served on board the vessel during the period 25 July 1995 to 31 January 1996. The main claim was in respect of unpaid wages due as at 24 July 1996. They also had an alternative claim for an amount allegedly due to them in terms of a settlement. In what follows I shall refer to the E plaintiffs in case No AC134/99 as 'the second respondents'.

[3] In the second judgment on appeal the learned Judge dealt with these two cases as well as a third case, which was case No AC4/2002. The plaintiffs in this case, also an action in rem against the vessel, were the first 21 plaintiffs in case No AC127/99. F Their claims were in respect of wages due and unpaid for the period 1 July to 13 October 1999, being the day before they were repatriated to Russia. In what follows I shall refer to them as 'the third respondents'.

[4] The arrest by which the first action in rem (case No AC127/99) was instituted took place on 14 July 1999 and the G arrest by which the second action in rem (case No AC134/99) was instituted took place on 23 July 1999.

[5] On 30 July 1999 the Sheriff of Cape Town applied to the Cape Provincial Division for an order inter alia declaring (i) that various parties at whose instance the vessel had been arrested H (the first and second respondents and two other companies who are not parties to the present appeal) were jointly and severally liable with such of the arresting parties to the extent that the vessel was under the arrest at their instance during the said period, for all the Sheriff's expenses reasonably incurred in the preservation of the I vessel as well as his reasonable remuneration in relation to such expenses, in respect of the period during which the vessel was under arrest at the instance of that party, and (ii) that the continued arrest of the vessel at the instance of each of the arresting parties be made conditional upon that party reimbursing the Sheriff within ten days of J

Farlam JA

demand for his reasonable expenses for the preservation of the vessel incurred during the period the vessel was under arrest at the A instance of that arresting party, as well as for his reasonable remuneration in relation to such expenses.

[6] This application was dismissed by Cleaver J in the High Court but succeeded on appeal to this Court. This Court's judgment, which was delivered on 1 June 2001, is reported as MT B Argun: Sheriff of Cape Town v MT Argun, Her Owners and All Persons Interested in Her and Others; Sheriff of Cape Town and Another v MT Argun, Her Owners and All Persons Interested in Her and Another 2001 (3) SA 1230 (SCA).

[7] The first and second respondents did not reimburse the Sheriff of Cape Town for the preservation expenses and remuneration C referred to in this Court's order after he had demanded such reimbursement and on 21 June 2002 at the instance of the vessel's owner, Foxcroft J declared that the arrests of the vessel at the instance of the first and second respondents had lapsed by operation of the order made by this Court on 1 June 2001. D

[8] The vessel had in the meantime been arrested on 21 February 2002 at the instance of the third respondents in case No AC4/2002. Despite the fact that the arrests at the instance of the first and second respondents had lapsed, Foxcroft J directed that the first and second actions proceed to trial together with the third action. Special pleas to the effect that the first and second actions E had lapsed when the arrests in those actions lapsed were dismissed in the first judgment on appeal and the actions then proceeded to trial.

[9] On 12 September 2002 Foxcroft J delivered the second judgment which is now on appeal. He ordered the defendant vessel, F which is the appellant before us, to pay:

(a)

the capital amount of the plaintiff's claims in all three actions (amended in slight respects);

(b)

interest at the rate of 15,5% per annum with effect from the end of each month for which each plaintiff had claimed G wages;

(c)

the plaintiffs' costs of suit on a party and party scale, including:

(i)

the necessary travel costs of the master;

(ii)

the Sheriff's reasonable and necessary costs incurred in preserving the vessel and his reasonable remuneration earned in respect thereof from the date of her arrest until: H

(aa)

in the first and second actions, the lapsing of each arrest; and

(bb)

in the third action, the release of the vessel from arrest; and

(iii)

the costs of discovery. I

He further ordered that the costs in each of the three cases be paid by the defendant vessel and by her owner, the Russian Federation. In addition he declared that the first and second respondents were entitled to execute their judgments in rem obtained in respect of the vessel against the vessel. J

Farlam JA

Issues on appeal A

[10] Six issues were argued on appeal, viz:

1.

Whether the first and second actions lapsed when the arrests by which they were instituted lapsed.

2.

Whether the Judge in the Court below was justified in ordering that the first and second respondents were entitled to execute against the appellant their judgments in rem obtained B against her.

3.

Whether he was correct in ordering the appellant to pay interest on the amounts adjudged to be due to the respondents with effect from the end of each month for which they had claimed wages.

4.

Whether he was justified in ordering the appellant to pay interest on the capital amounts adjudged to be due to the C respondents at the rate of 15,5%.

5.

Whether he was empowered to order that the Sheriff's preservation costs and remuneration in respect of the vessel during the period of her arrest in each of the actions should constitute part of the respondent's costs of suit. D

6.

Whether the respondents should, irrespective of the outcome of the appeal, be ordered to pay the costs of an additional volume of the appeal record which the respondents prepared for inclusion therein and to which the appellant objected, as well as the costs of perusal thereof. E

Did the first and second actions in rem lapse when the arrests lapsed?

[11] In regard to this issue Mr Wragge, who appeared on behalf of the appellant, pointed out: that the first and second respondents' claims arise from contracts entered into, not with the owner of the MT Argun, ie the Government of the F Russian Federation, but with two companies, National Pacific GSC SA in the case of the first respondents and Inaqua Co in the case of the second respondents; that it is not alleged that the owner of the vessel at the time of her arrest was personally liable to them; and that the arrests by which the first and second actions in rem were instituted were based upon the fact that the respondents had maritime liens over the vessel in respect of their G claims.

[12] Counsel submitted that in order to determine the nature of the first and second respondents' claims and the maritime lien which underpins their actions in rem and the arrests by which they were instituted, it is necessary to have regard to the relevant provisions of the Act and the rules promulgated thereunder H against the backdrop of English Admiralty law as it was on 1 November 1983 when the Act was brought into operation. He contended that this was so because the 'matter' or issue between the appellant and the first and second respondents is the effect which the lapsing of their arrests had on their actions in rem. This issue is a matter in respect of which a Court of Admiralty of the I Republic sitting pursuant to the provisions of s 2(1) of the Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act 1890, 53 and 54 Vict (c 27) had jurisdiction before the commencement of the Act on 1 November 1983. This is because in terms of s 6 (1) of the Act the law applicable is the law 'which the High J

Farlam JA

Court of Justice of the United Kingdom in the exercise of its admiralty jurisdiction would have applied with regard to such a A matter' at the commencement of the Act 'insofar as that law can be applied'. (The reference to 'the High Court of Justice of the United Kingdom' was presumably intended to be a reference to the Supreme Court of England and Wales as constituted by the Supreme Court Act, 1981: see Brady-Hamilton Stevedore Co and Others v MV Kalantiao 1987 (4) SA 250 (D) at 253D and MV Stella Tingas: B Transnet Ltd t/a Portnet v Owners of the MV Stella Tingas and Another 2003 (2) SA 473 (SCA) at 479G - H.)

[13] Mr Wragge dealt in his argument with various theories regarding the origin of the concept of the maritime lien in English maritime law as well as the ambit and effect of the maritime lien in English Admiralty law and in particular with maritime liens for C seamen's wages and...

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22 practice notes
  • List of cases
    • South Africa
    • Transactions of the Centre for Business Law No. 2011-47, January 2011
    • 1 Enero 2011
    ...Shipping & Portland Shipping Co Ltd [1977] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 180Arbonne, The (1925) 23 Ll L Rep 141Arcturus, The 18 F 743 (1883)Argun, The 2004(1) SA 1 (SCA)Askrigg Pty Ltd v Student Guild of the Curtin University of Technology (1989) 18 NSWLR 738Astoria, The [1927] 4 DLR 1022, see also Baker, ......
  • The maritime lien and the present Australian admiralty law
    • South Africa
    • Transactions of the Centre for Business Law No. 2011-47, January 2011
    • 1 Enero 2011
    ...in personam, save as to costs, merely by reason of having given notice of appearance and defending the action in rem − see The Argun 2004(1) SA 1(SCA); SA Boatyards CC v The Lady Rose 1991(3) SA 711 (C).90 See, DR Thomas, Maritime Liens (Stevens & Sons, London, 1980) at 37. Jurisdiction in ......
  • MV Alina II (No 2) Transnet Ltd v Owner of MV Alina II
    • South Africa
    • Invalid date
    ...Co Ltd and Another 1986 (4) SA 329 (D): dictum at 333E – G applied MT Argun: MT Argun v Master and Crew of the MT Argun and Others 2004 (1) SA 1 (SCA) ([2003] 4 All SA 139): dictum in para [26] criticised D MV Alina II (No 1): Transnet Ltd v Owner of MV Alina II 2011 (6) SA 40 (WCC): confir......
  • Transnet Ltd v Rubenstein
    • South Africa
    • Invalid date
    ...2002 (5) SA 347 (SCA) para [23] and Consol Ltd t/a Consol Glass v Twee Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd and Another 2005 (6) SA 1 (SCA) ([2004] 1 All SA 1) paras [50] and [8] At 141C - E. [9] See also Barnabas Plein & Co v Sol Jacobson & Son 1928 AD 25 at 31 - 2 where Stratford JA too had regard to......
  • Request a trial to view additional results
20 cases
  • MV Alina II (No 2) Transnet Ltd v Owner of MV Alina II
    • South Africa
    • Invalid date
    ...Co Ltd and Another 1986 (4) SA 329 (D): dictum at 333E – G applied MT Argun: MT Argun v Master and Crew of the MT Argun and Others 2004 (1) SA 1 (SCA) ([2003] 4 All SA 139): dictum in para [26] criticised D MV Alina II (No 1): Transnet Ltd v Owner of MV Alina II 2011 (6) SA 40 (WCC): confir......
  • Transnet Ltd v Rubenstein
    • South Africa
    • Invalid date
    ...2002 (5) SA 347 (SCA) para [23] and Consol Ltd t/a Consol Glass v Twee Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd and Another 2005 (6) SA 1 (SCA) ([2004] 1 All SA 1) paras [50] and [8] At 141C - E. [9] See also Barnabas Plein & Co v Sol Jacobson & Son 1928 AD 25 at 31 - 2 where Stratford JA too had regard to......
  • MV Alina II (No 2) Transnet Ltd v Owner of MV Alina II
    • South Africa
    • Supreme Court of Appeal
    • 15 Septiembre 2011
    ...to join the owner as a party in personam. [50] At 67J – 68B. [51] MT Argun: MT Argun v Master and Crew of the MT Argun and Others 2004 (1) SA 1 (SCA) ([2003] 4 All SA [52] Paragraph 26. [53] Note 27 supra. ...
  • Carter v Haworth
    • South Africa
    • Invalid date
    ...(C) ([2002] 1 All SA 517) paras 58 and 59; Consol Ltd t/a Consol Glass v Twee Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd and Another 2005 (6) SA 1 (SCA) ([2004] 1 All SA 1) para 62; Consol Ltd t/a Consol Glass v Twee Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd and Another (2) 2005 (6) SA 23 (C) para 63; D'Ambrosi v Bane and Ot......
  • Request a trial to view additional results
2 books & journal articles
  • List of cases
    • South Africa
    • Transactions of the Centre for Business Law No. 2011-47, January 2011
    • 1 Enero 2011
    ...Shipping & Portland Shipping Co Ltd [1977] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 180Arbonne, The (1925) 23 Ll L Rep 141Arcturus, The 18 F 743 (1883)Argun, The 2004(1) SA 1 (SCA)Askrigg Pty Ltd v Student Guild of the Curtin University of Technology (1989) 18 NSWLR 738Astoria, The [1927] 4 DLR 1022, see also Baker, ......
  • The maritime lien and the present Australian admiralty law
    • South Africa
    • Transactions of the Centre for Business Law No. 2011-47, January 2011
    • 1 Enero 2011
    ...in personam, save as to costs, merely by reason of having given notice of appearance and defending the action in rem − see The Argun 2004(1) SA 1(SCA); SA Boatyards CC v The Lady Rose 1991(3) SA 711 (C).90 See, DR Thomas, Maritime Liens (Stevens & Sons, London, 1980) at 37. Jurisdiction in ......

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