Arrest of merchant vessels calling at Cochin by the High Court of Kerala has increased in recent times. Though the same ought to be a matter of concern for the entire shipping community at Cochin, it has not received the attention it deserves.
The spurt in the
number of arrests has revealed the vulnerability of the vessels calling at the Cochin
port. At a time when the shipping prospects of Cochin are brightening and vessels
including mother ships and large cruise liners are calling at Cochin almost on a
daily basis, it is in the interest of the shipping community, especially the Liners
and their agents acting from Cochin, that the law pertaining to the arrest of sea
going vessels is stream lined and updated to meet the needs of the time.
Arrest and detention
of a foreign vessel towards enforcing a maritime claim is a potent weapon in the
hands of a person which ensures that his lawful claim is protected when the claim
is ultimately decided in his favor by a Court of law. But in the hands unscrupulous
persons the same can be used as a means to pressurize the vessel and its owners
to heed to the illegal and unjustified demands raised by the claimant. The right
of a person to seek arrest of a vessel has to be clearly circumscribed and demarcated
so as to ensure that the said right is never misused. Unfortunately the law relating
ship arrests as it now exists, is devoid of safe guards to prevent an unscrupulous
or malicious arrest.
The lack of clarity
in law regarding arrest has even lead to situations where the Court arrests vessels
lying in Ports as far off as Mumbai in purported claims that have nothing to do
with Cochin or Kerala and even where the concerned vessel has never even called
at Cochin Port. Cochin has thus become a convenient forum for raising frivolous
maritime claims seeking arrest of vessels and for compelling ship owners to satisfy
the illegal demands which in the long run does not augur well for the shipping community
here.
All this is because
there exists no comprehensive code for shipping laws laying down the legal norms
both substantive and procedural, governing different aspects of admiralty. The law
that presently governs the power to arrest sea going vessels in India can be traced
to the Colonial Courts of Admiralty Act, 1891 which conferred Admiralty Jurisdiction
including the power to arrest and detain a vessel, on the Chartered High Courts
of erstwhile British India. After independence like in many other walks of life
admiralty law too failed to keep pace with the changing times. This legislative
lacunae was sought to be plugged to a certain extent by Justice Kochu Thommen, Supreme
Court of India in the celebrated decision of mv Elizabeth by holding inter alia
that all High Courts in India being superior courts of record possess inherent admiralty
jurisdiction. By virtue of the said decision, the High Court of Kerala too possess
admiralty jurisdiction over vessels situated within its territorial limits. Thus
any vessel within the territorial waters of Kerala and Lakshadweep falls within
the admiralty jurisdiction of the High Court of Kerala and can be arrested or detained
pursuant to a maritime claim.
The substantive
law thus having been taken care of by the Supreme Court, now the procedural vacuum
comes to the fore. Chartered High Courts like Mumbai, Calcutta and Chennai possess
original civil jurisdiction and maritime claims along with petitions seeking arrest
of the vessel are filed before the said High Courts as Civil Suits by remitting
the mandatory court fee which would depend on the suit amount. The same acts as
a check on frivolous litigations since by and large only genuine claimants would
choose to deposit court fee and initiate a proceeding against a vessel and seek
its arrest. Any frivolous arrest would be visited with exemplary damages. These
High Courts have also evolved detailed Admiralty Rules to deal with the procedural
aspects of cases involving vessels.
The situation
as it exists in Kerala is different in so far as the High court of Kerala does not
exercise original civil jurisdiction in admiralty matters. Though in the light of
the decision in mv Elizabeth High Courts in certain other states similarly placed
as the High Court of Kerala have got over the said hurdle by evolving Rules governing
admiralty practice, no such rule has been evolved by the Kerala High Court. Hence
an action seeking arrest of a vessel is filed before the High Court of Kerala as
a Writ Petition under Article 226 of the Constitution seeking a direction to the
Port authorities to detain the vessel relying on Sec. 443 of the Merchant Shipping
Act, 1956. The inherent defect of the said exercise which relegates Cochin as a
favorite destination through forum shopping is that an arrest motion can be filed
here with out depositing a farthing inspite of the fact that the claim raised against
the impugned vessel would run to any fanciful amount at times to crores of Rupees.
As the Court is not equipped to delve into questions of fact while exercising its
jurisdiction under Article 226, the complicated factual matters that are invariably
involved in all maritime claims cannot be looked in to by the High Court. Thus all
that the Court does is to issue an arrest mostly ex parte and direct that the vessel
be detained unless the claim amount in full is not deposited or an equivalent bank
guarantee is provided for the said amount. Apprehensive of disrupting schedules,
the vessel chooses to provide the bank guarantee than risk a prolonged arrest and
detention. Once the Bank Guarantee is furnished, the matter is relegated to the
appropriate civil court where a long drawn civil battle awaits the vessel and its
owners for the entire period of which the Bank guarantee has to be kept alive. Banks
insist on heavy interest for keeping the bank guarantee live for inordinate long
period and this acts as an economic duress on the vessel owner to settle the matter
at the earliest at terms favourable to the claimant.
The civil law
right to file a general caveat which is available to the ship owner to preempt the
arrest motion and to be informed of the same before an actual arrest order is issued,
which is available to him before the High Courts like Mumbai is not available to
him in Cochin, based on the reasoning that no caveat would lie in a writ proceeding.
Though the right to file a caveat as envisaged in the Civil Procedure Code does
exist and can be availed, many a time, the vessel or its owners would not be in
a position to know before hand the name, address and other details of the person
or entity that might move for an arrest. It is to take care of such eventualities
that in High Courts like Mumbai, filing of a general caveat is permitted which is
filed by the vessel or its owners against the world at large and before any motion
for arrest is issued, notice would be given to the vessel or to its representative.
Thus surprise arrests which are a bane in Cochin and damaging to its interest could
be avoided.
Early initiatives
are to be taken by the shipping community of Cochin towards altering the above scenario
and towards evolving legal norms that would plug the present loopholes of law. If
the proposed development activities in the Cochin Port and the infrastructural additions
in the anvil are to achieve its desired ends, appropriate changes have to be made
to the legal norms governing admiralty matters too.
Law may be only
one among the many platforms from which the eternal battle for social and economic
progress of the community has to be fought. But we ought not forget that it is too
important a platform to be ignored in the developmental process.
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