Voyage Charters
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Chapter 37
Laydays – Cancelling
25. LAYDAYS. Laytime shall not commence before the date stipulated in Part I, except with the Charterer’s sanction. Should the Vessel not be ready to load by 4.00 o’clock P.M. (local time) on the cancelling date stipulated in Part I, the Charterer shall have the option of cancelling this Charter by giving Owner notice of such cancellation within twenty-four (24) hours after such cancellation date: otherwise this Charter to remain in full force and effect. |
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Narrowing the laydays
37.6 Some charters contain a provision whereby the laydays specified in the charter itself are to be narrowed, by one or other party, on or before a specified date. A clause of this nature is primarily for the benefit of the charterer, and in Universal Bulk Carriers v. Andre et Cie,5 where the laydays were to be narrowed by the charterer, it was contended that the clause merely conferred on the charterer an option, and that their failure to narrow the laydays was not a breach of the charter. Longmore J. and the Court of Appeal rejected this contention, holding that the clause did indeed impose an obligation which the charterer had breached. However, the obligation was not a condition,6 and the charterer’s breach did not go to the root of the contract, with the result that the owner was not justified in terminating the charter.7U.S. Law
Commencement of laytime before first layday
37A.1 Although clause 5 refers to “laytime,” the clause is primarily concerned with cancellation and the canceling period (sometimes also called “laydays”). The subject of laytime itself is discussed in the next section dealing with clauses 6 and 7, while this section deals with canceling. 37A.2 Clause 5 is concerned with the commencement of laytime only in so far as it relates to the first day of the canceling period. It provides that laytime does not commence prior to the date specified in Part I(B) unless the charterer sanctions an earlier commencement expressly or by unequivocal conduct. The majority view among New York arbitrators, however, is that, absent provisions to the contrary, notice of readiness can be effectively tendered prior to the date stated in Part I(B) which will trigger clause 6’s six-hour “free period” so that laytime commences to run as soon as permissible under the charter (i.e., at 0000 hours on the first layday specified in Part I(B)).8Page 927
“Except with the charterer's sanction”
37A.3 The owner is obligated to proceed to the loading port with “all convenient dispatch” and, if the vessel is not ready to load on the canceling date specified in Part I(B), the charterer has the option of either canceling, by giving timely and unequivocal notice, or accepting the vessel. In the absence of an effective notice of cancellation, the charter remains in effect. The charterer may also have a right to damages if the owner breached its obligation to proceed with dispatch or its conduct was unreasonable and/or deceptive.9 37A.4 The charterer may be held to have sanctioned an earlier commencement of laytime by unequivocally accepting the owner’s tender and loading the vessel prior to the date specified in Part I(B).10Canceling date
37A.5 In The Nedi,11 the panel held that the charterer had properly exercised its option to cancel the charter (albeit several days after the canceling date), but rejected the charterer’s claim for damages, stating:The law is clear that a late tender in and by itself does not create a right to recover damages. The right may exist if an owner materially misrepresents the vessel’s position or breaches his duty to perform with reasonable dispatch, i.e., where an owner makes an unreasonable interim voyage or carries out repairs. Otherwise, the causes which give rise to a late tender only allow the charterer an option to cancel and not a right of action for damages.