Voyage Charters
Page 820
Chapter 24
Brokerage
14. | Brokerage | 141 |
A brokerage commission at the rate stated in Box 20 on the freight | 142 | |
earned is due to the party mentioned in Box 20. | 143 | |
In case of non-execution at least ⅓ of the brokerage on the estimated | 144 | |
amount of freight and dead-freight to be paid by the Owners to the | 145 | |
Brokers as indemnity for the latter’s expenses and work. In case of | 146 | |
more voyages the amount of indemnity to be mutually agreed. | 147 |
Page 821
The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
24.3 The Act came into force on 11 November 1999 and applies to contracts entered into on or after 11 May 2000, unless, or in the case of an earlier contract, it expressly provides for the application of the Act, in which case it will apply as if the contract was entered into on or after the day when the Act came into force.4 Most modern charters will, therefore, be within the ambit of the Act, although each charter will still need to be construed to ensure that the Act applies to it. 24.4 Section 1(1) of the Act provides that a third party may enforce a term of the contract if:- (a) the contract expressly5 provides that he may, or
- (b) subject to subsection (2), the term purports to confer a benefit on him.
It is not customary for brokerage clauses expressly to provide that they may be enforced by the broker, but they will, prima facie, fall within the category (b), since the usual form of brokerage clause purports to confer a benefit on the broker. It is not necessary that the broker be named in the clause, so long as he can reasonably be identified,6 and a clause which merely provides “brokerage X per cent” probably satisfies the requirement of section 1(1) of the Act whether or not there is to be division between brokers. Such clauses are to be construed with a view to achieving their plain commercial purpose.