CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)
Commercial Court

CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)

Fecha: 17-Jul-2025

Conclusions

Conclusions

97.

These were not procedurally flawed appeals pursuing the wrong remedy, as the seller argued. They were properly brought, and not premature so as to be defeated by s.70(2) of the Arbitration Act 1996.

98.

The Board of Appeal, with respect, misdirected themselves as to the meaning of s.49(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 in such a way as to eliminate the key requirement that by the subject contracts for the sale of goods, the price had to have been payable ‘irrespective of delivery’. I answer the questions of law on which leave to appeal was granted as follows:

(i)

Is a seller of goods f.o.b. entitled to maintain an action for the price pursuant to section 49(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 where:

(a)

the contract provides that the price is payable against documents;

(b)

property in the goods has not passed;

(c)

the goods have been delivered on board a vessel but the price has not been paid;

(d)

the original cargo documents have not been provided to the buyer;

or is the seller’s remedy one only in damages?

Answer: Such a seller may not maintain an action for the price under s.49(2). Its only claim (in principle) is for damages, but no such claim was made in the arbitration.

(ii)

What is meant by the term “a day certain” in section 49(2)?

Answer: The question of law does not arise. On any view, the amended payment clause under which the seller made its claim in each arbitration provided for the price to be payable on a day certain within s.49(2).

(iii)

On the facts found by the Board of Appeal, should the seller’s claim for the price of the corn shipped on board the relevant vessel have succeeded?

Answer: No, in each arbitration the seller’s claim for the price was bad in law and should have been dismissed by the Board of Appeal.

99.

These appeals must therefore be allowed. In each appeal, relevant parts of the Award will be set aside and substituted with a dismissal of the seller’s claim. There is no need or basis for remission to the Board of Appeal.