Contact with chambers should be made through the Practice Management Team. They are happy to discuss client requirements and provide further information on such matters as the expertise and experience of individual members, fees, working practices and languages spoken. We have members able to work in French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Greek and Chinese (Mandarin).
Outside working hours, a member of our team is always available to be contacted on matters of an urgent nature. Contact should be made using the Chambers main number or email.
For our Singapore office, for client enquiries please contact our Head of Business Development for Asia Pacific, Katie-Beth Jones, and for all other queries please contact Lynn Quek. Out of office hours calls will automatically be diverted to our practice management team in London.
28 Maxwell Road
#02-03 Maxwell Chambers Suites
Singapore 069120
enquires@20essex.uk
t: +45 36988379
Contact with chambers should be made through the Practice Management Team. They are happy to discuss client requirements and provide further information on such matters as the expertise and experience of individual members, fees, working practices and languages spoken. We have members able to work in French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Greek and Chinese (Mandarin).
Outside working hours, a member of our team is always available to be contacted on matters of an urgent nature. Contact should be made using the Chambers main number or email.
For our Singapore office, for client enquiries please contact our Head of Business Development for Asia Pacific, Katie-Beth Jones, and for all other queries please contact Lynn Quek. Out of office hours calls will automatically be diverted to our practice management team in London.
28 Maxwell Road
#02-03 Maxwell Chambers Suites
Singapore 069120
enquires@20essex.uk
t: +45 36988379
Scipion Active Trading Fund v Vallis Group Limited [2020] EWHC 1451 (Comm)
The Commercial Court has delivered judgment on a claim for breach of a Collateral Management Agreement (CMA) following the loss of about 1,900 MT copper scrap from a production and storage facility in Morocco at which the Defendant was the collateral manager.
The copper was held, or intended to be held, by the Defendant as security for a loan made by the Claimant to Mac Z Group SARL and was subject to a pledge granted by Mac Z to the Claimant which was governed by Moroccan law.
Part way through the trial, the Defendant admitted there was a physical loss of copper that had been delivered into its possession at the site which was caused by breaches by it of obligations owed to the Claimant under the CMA. The Defendant contended, however, that the pledge was invalid under Moroccan law with the result that its breach of the CMA did not cause the loss claimed.
Mr Justice Henshaw held that the pledge was indeed invalid under Moroccan law (because the Moroccan administration did not publish a list of categories of goods that may be subject to the particular type of pledge as required by the Moroccan Code of Commerce in force at that time) but accepted that the Claimant was entitled to recover the value of the lost goods by reason of its possessory rights as bailor of those goods on the terms of the CMA.
In so holding the judge made number of findings of wider interest including that:
As regards the measure of loss, the Court accepted that the Claimant was entitled to damages equal to the value of the lost goods on the date on which they were lost (approximately US$10.5 million), plus statutory interest, subject to a deduction of 3% pursuant to a contractual exemption. In order to avoid any need for the Claimant to account to Mac Z for a surplus, the Claimant limited its claim to the amount outstanding under its loan to Mac Z, net of recoveries made to date, less the value of the remaining goods. As regards the latter recoveries the Court held that the Claimant did not fail to mitigate its loss by delaying sale or otherwise failing to recover a proper value for the goods.
Michael Collett QC and Malcolm Jarvis appeared for the Claimant, instructed by Preston Turnbull LLP.