Dundas Shipping & Trading Co. v. Stravelakis Bros.

508 F. Supp. 1000, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9444
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 2, 1981
Docket80 Civ. 6783
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 508 F. Supp. 1000 (Dundas Shipping & Trading Co. v. Stravelakis Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dundas Shipping & Trading Co. v. Stravelakis Bros., 508 F. Supp. 1000, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9444 (S.D.N.Y. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

Before the Court are motions by parties to an agreement pursuant to which an arbitration was conducted — one party petitions to vacate or modify the award for failure to allow it damages and the other cross-petitions to vacate the award insofar as it found against it on the issue of liability.

Dundas Shipping & Trading Co., Ltd. (“Dundas”), a Canadian corporation and the petitioner, and Stravelakis Brothers, Ltd. (“Stravelakis”), the cross-petitioner and a Greek corporation, in August 1972 entered into a two-year contract of affreightment, with an option for a third year, under which Stravelakis as agent for vessel owners agreed to provide Dundas with the vessels for the carriage of “lawful merchandise” from southern African ports to the United States. At the same time, Dundas entered into a virtually identical “back-to-back” contract with Leonard J. Buck, Inc. (“Buck”), a New Jersey corporation. Although Buck was not a party to the contract between Dundas and Stravelakis or to the arbitration proceeding that is the subject of their current motions, Buck is included in the caption of this proceeding as a co-petitioner with Dundas.

Under the contract of affreightment between Dundas and Stravelakis, the date for the first lifting of cargo was October/November 1972. However, during their negotiations, the parties learned that another vessel, the Venthisikimi, a Greek flag vessel, was available before October 1, 1972 and so they entered into a single voyage charter party for that vessel. Greece was one of the countries that had subscribed to the United Nations sanctions against carrying products originating from or destined to Rhodesia. It appeared that because some of the cargo carried by the Venthisikimi was of Rhodesian origin, the Greek authorities commenced an investigation into possible violations of Greek law implementing these sanctions. In late October 1972, Dundas sought to have Stravelakis nominate the first vessel under the contract of affreightment. Stravelakis, based on the Venthisikimi incident, was concerned that cargo to be tendered it by Dundas would be of Rhodesian origin and thus would violate the legal proscriptions against importing Rhodesian goods and declined to nominate any vessel. Thereupon, Dundas, pursuant to the arbitration provision in the contract, designated its arbitrator; Stravelakis did likewise and the two arbitrators agreed upon a third. That arbitration proceeded in two stages — liability and damages. As stated by the arbitrators in the interim award at the end of the first stage:

The issue considered by the Panel is whether an Owner may refuse to perform under a Contract of Affreightment solely because a reason exists to expect that certain cargoes would be tendered which would be “non-lawful” under the contract and the nations of charterer and vessel registry.
This decision considers only the issue of liability, if any, for the alleged breach of the Contract. The measure of damages suffered, if any, are reserved for subsequent consideration as warranted.

*1002 On the issue of liability, both sides offered evidence before the arbitrators, Stravelakis stressing the Venthisikimi incident and Dundas contending that not only was this a separate single voyage charter but also that Stravelakis was using it as a strategem to profit from a substantial rise in the freight market that had occurred since the agreement had been entered into between them. The panel found that the charterer Dundas could have tendered acceptable cargoes if given the opportunity to do so. After giving due consideration to the Venthisikimi incident, which the panel found “unique and distinguishable,” it concluded that Stravelakis had failed to show probable cause that there “would be illegality,” and thus that it could not “find in either equity or the facts ground sufficiently convincing to justify the anticipatory breach of [Stravelakis] nor to excuse [it] from fulfilling the most basic of [a ship owner’s] duty, that of presenting a vessel.” Accordingly, Stravelakis was cast in liability to Dundas and the arbitration moved on to the issue of damages.

Four hearings were conducted on the damage claim, and as on the issue of liability, the parties were represented by their attorneys, briefs were submitted and reply briefs were exchanged. The evidence developed that Buck was a trading firm engaged in the importation of chrome and magnesium ores into the United States and that the back-to-back contract between Buck and Dundas, which as already noted was essentially similar to the Dundas/Stravelakis contract, was allegedly entered into for tax reasons. Dundas sought $6,500,000 damages for increased cost of shipment based on an arbitrarily selected portion of Buck’s total ore import trade, referred to as “replacement” voyages.

Stravelakis urged that the documents purporting to support the damage claim revealed that Buck, not Dundas, had paid for transporting the “replacement” cargoes and had assumed any increased cost. The claim that Dundas suffered no damage was raised at the first hearing after the production of the documents. Stravelakis’ counsel specifically directed the Panel’s attention to the fact that it “had been convened to decide the dispute between Stravelakis and Dundas, not between Stravelakis and Buck and not between Buck and Dundas,” and that there was no basis for a damage award either to Dundas, because it had not sustained any damages, or to Buck, because it was not a party to the agreement or arbitration. 1

It was not until the final hearing before the Panel that response was made to Stravelakis’ contention. Dundas’ counsel, having previously stipulated that Dundas and Buck were separate legal entities, argued that “everyone knew” Dundas acted in a representative capacity and that Buck was the real party in interest, that no objections had been made during the arbitration proceedings that Buck had not been made a party thereto, and that if Stravelakis thought Buck was a necessary party, its counsel should have taken action to that end. Stravelakis persisted in its previously asserted position and pressed that since the contract and the arbitration submission were between it and Dundas only, a holding that Buck was a party to the arbitration would, in his words, “be tantamount to a change of the contract terms by the Panel.” Buck, alerted to the Stravelakis position prior to the close of the hearings when there was still an opportunity for action, failed to heed the suggestion that it institute an arbitration proceeding against Dundas pursuant to the agreement between them and then move to consolidate it with the pending one; nor did it present any evidence that it was acting on behalf of Buck.

After hearing extended argument and receiving briefs from the parties, the Panel rendered its award. At the very outset, the Panel noted that “[i]t was conceded — for reasons that were never fully explained— that Buck never sought arbitration with Dundas under the arbitration clause of their Contract of Affreightment, that *1003 Buck/Dundas damages were not liquidated in any known way. Buck never joined as a formal party in this Dundas/Stravelakis proceeding before the Panel.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
508 F. Supp. 1000, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dundas-shipping-trading-co-v-stravelakis-bros-nysd-1981.