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Commercial Court Louise Glover Commercial Court Louise Glover

Ceto Shipping Corporation v Savory Shipping Inc [2025] EWHC 2033 (Comm)

On expiry of a 3 year bareboat C/P, Owners (Savory) were obliged to transfer title of the Vessel to Charterers (Ceto) if the latter had “paid all… sums due under this Charter and… under … [a] Management Agreement with [a 3rd party].” Despite earlier termination of the Management Agreement, sums remained due under it at the end of the C/P. The Court upheld Savory’s refusal to transfer title, ruling that the right was available only at the precise expiry of the C/P term and even later payment by Ceto of the sums would not revive the transfer obligation.

 

Read the full judgment here.

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Commercial Court Louise Glover Commercial Court Louise Glover

White Rock Corporation Ltd v Middle Volga Shipping Company & Anor [2025]

Four Vessels were chartered by a single Shelltime C/P providing for English law and jurisdiction. Disputes arose, and the Claimant Charterers issued proceedings against Middle Volga (Russian registered owners) and North Global. The Court upheld Middle Volga’s challenge to jurisdiction, finding that neither the Recap nor the drawn-up (but unsigned) C/P evidenced a contract with them; the Recap merely referred to the Q88, which in turn identified others as registered owners and North Global as disponent owners.  Further, a C/P declaration that “Owners” had no connection with Russia made it clear that North Global rather than Middle Volga were intended to be the contracting party.

 

Read the full judgment here.

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Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis

Sino East Transportation Ltd v Grand Amazon Shipping Ltd [2025] EWHC 1990 (Comm) (30 July 2025)

Having been held liable by a PRC Court for damage to a cargo (suffering from inherent vice) the Respondent Owners sought an indemnity from the Claimant Time Charterers both under the ICA and the implied indemnity arising out of NYPE Clause 8. The Tribunal allowed the latter. Dismissing Charterers’ appeal, the Court confirmed that the implied indemnity was engaged, and that there was no special rule for inherent vice, which was not an ordinary trading risk for which Owners were remunerated by hire.

 

Read the full judgment here.

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Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis

A&N Seaways and Projects PVT Ltd v Allianz BulkCarriers DMCC [2025] EWHC 2126 (Comm) (13 August 2025)

A&N Seaways challenged an arbitration award which upheld Owners’ withdrawal of the MV Bharadwaj for non-payment of hire, despite Charterers’ “interim response” alleging the C/P was procured by fraud. The Court dismissed Charterers’ argument that the C/P was a nullity and that no valid arbitration agreement existed, refusing late attempts to plead fraud as out of time and inadequately particularised, and holding the claim had no real prospect of success.

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Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis

Tonzip Maritime Ltd v 2Rivers PTE Ltd [2025] EWHC 2036 (Comm) 31 July 2025

Under a voyage charter, the Claimant Owners refused Charterers’ orders to load a cargo from shippers, Neftisa, relying on a real risk of exposure under the EPS Sanctions clause. Owners relied on screening software indicating links between Neftisa and a Mr Gutseriev, sanctioned by the EU and UK for ties to Belarus’ Lukashenko regime (albeit that he had transferred ownership and stepped down from the board some months earlier). Owners treated Charterers’ consequent cancellation of the C/P as a repudiatory breach. The Court found in Charterers’ favour, ruling that the refusal was not a reasonable or objective assessment of the risk and the Sanctions clause had been wrongly invoked. 

Read the full judgment here.

Read the full judgment here.

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Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis Commercial Court Lucy Arghyrakis

Urania Shipping Company Ltd v Nordtrade SIA & Anor [2025] EWHC 1835 (Comm) (18 July 2025)

Owners of the “Ida” purportedly chartered her brokers via Nordtrade (D2) to BFT for a St Petersburg-Izmir wood pellet voyage. On arrival, freight was outstanding. Although later settled (via Nordtrade), Owners withheld discharge pending demurrage, prompting BFT to claim the C/P. Owners settled with BFT but claimed against D2 for breach of warranty of authority. D2 was served at its registered principal Turkish office (although they did not, in fact, notice the papers for some 4 months) and, in the absence of acknowledgment of service, had default judgment (in excess of USD1m) entered against them. D2 applied to set this aside. The Court granted the application, holding the delay was not unreasonable and D2 had a real prospect of establishing their co-defendant D1 was the broker and that BFT gave actual authority to them.

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