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Introduction
In late June of 2003, I
received an e-mail from Daniel Harris, who introduced
himself as maritime lawyer from Seattle. He had found me
through the internet and was asking me whether I was
interested in helping arrest transshipped cargo in Dalian.
I was excited about the task and I surfed Dan's website [http://www.harrismoure.com]
and learned Dan owns a small international law firm in
Seattle, called Harris & Moure. I replied to him
immediately and sent him some relevant provisions
concerning cargo arrests under China legal system. He was
very happy with my prompt and helpful reply and we soon
were working together on the case. He later told me he was
so impressed with my responses that he had picked me over
numerous other lawyers throughout China.
Brief of the case
OOO Bolshoretskoe is a
Russian fishing company that sold 400 Tons of pollock
worth around US$700,000 to Alimex Seafood A/S, a Danish
company. The pollock was scheduled to be transshipped from
Dalian to Europe. Alimex had not yet paid Bolshoretskoe
for the product. Bolshoretskoe owed Daxin Petroleum Pte,
Ltd., a Singapore fuel supply company, around US$400,000
for fuel. M/V IVAN POLZUNOV, the vessel carrying the
pollock, was scheduled to call on Dalian on 4 July, 2003.
Our task was to seize the pollock for Daxin to get
Bolshoretskoe to pay its debt.
Bolshoretskoe’s debt to
Daxin arose in July and December, 2002, when Daxin
supplied bunker products for two Russian fishing vessels,
TOSNO and PHOENIX. To secure these fuelings, Bolshoretskoe
signed a guarantee letter to Daxin in which
“Bolshoretskoe assigns all receivables resulting from
production, deliveries and selling of Salmon or Pollock
on/from board of F/T PHOENIX in favor of Daxin for the
amount of the bunker supply. In addition, Bolshoretskoe
agrees that property title to salmon or pollock products
covering the amount of the bunker shall pass to Daxin
immediately upon processing and/or storage of the products
on board of PHOENIX.
Daxin was not paid on its
two fuel deliveries, and Bolshoretskoe was refusing to
pay. It is estimated the TOSNO and PHOENIX owed a combined
total of around $20 million in unpaid debt to various
creditors.
Intensive and orderly
preparation for cargo arrest
After studying the relevant
documents and analyzing the entire history of the case, we
determined that either Bolshoretskoe or Alimex would pay
Daxin if we arrested the cargo in China. So we set about
to do just that.
First, we prepared all
necessary legal documents pursuant to Chinese law. Due to
the various different legal systems and languages involved
(China, Russia, Singapore and the United States), our
preparations were extremely time consuming. As we were
preparing our documentation and firming up our strategies,
Dan was also preparing to come to Dalian.
However, the day before Dan
was to leave the United States, he learned that the
pollock’s transport vessel, the IVAN POLZUNOV, had
secretly changed its plans in an effort to avoid arrest.
It would not be calling Dalian on July 4, 2003; it would
be calling Qingdao on July 8, 2003. Because all legal
documents had been prepared for the Dalian Maritime Court,
Bolshoretskoe’s change in plans necessitated we
completely change our plans also. With time so much of the
essence, we asked Sunfanlong, who works in Qingdao Wincon
law firm, to work with us and we transferred all legal
documents to him.
Successful Arrest of the
cargo
On July 7, 2003, Dan
arrived in Qingdao. The IVAN POLZUNOV arrived in Qingdao
the next day and began to discharge 15 containers of
pollock for transshipment to Europe. When the judge,
Wincon’s lawyer and Dan saw that the containers were
being offloaded on trailers for transport to the container
terminal, they went straight to the terminal to deliver
the arrest papers on all 15 containers. However, after
waiting nearly five hours at the terminal and waiting well
into the night, only three containers had arrived and been
arrested. Nobody seemed to know what had happened to the
other twelve containers. We were concerned Bolshoretskoe
and/or Alimex had learned of our arrest warrant and had
hidden the other twelve containers. Adding to our worries
was that we had by now learned that Alimex was to ship all
15 containers to Europe the very next day. We checked
everywhere for the missing twelve containers. We checked
with various trucking companies. We checked all around the
terminal. Nothing. Eventually, we learned that the twelve
containers had been in the terminal all along, but had
been issued separate bills of lading from the first three
and placed in a somewhat separate area. We had succeeded
in arresting all fifteen containers.
After our having engaged in
twelve days of intensive e-mail and telephone
communication together, Dan showed up at Dalian’s
airport. His high praise of our work conveyed his
satisfaction of our efficient job. Dalian and Qingdao’s
picturesque scenery and modern city construction impressed
Dan deeply and changed his previous imagination regarding
this part of China. He loved the food and our culture and
talked about returning some day with his family on
holiday.
Hard success to acquire
guaranty and lift the arrest
Now that we had the pollock
under arrest, we would need to maintain it in its frozen
condition at the terminal. Pollock is a valuable fish and
the costs and risks during the arrest period were high.
The sooner we could resolve the dispute, the sooner the
fish would be on its way, and the better it would be for
all parties.
The day after we arrested
the cargo, we received a letter from Alimex’s lawyers in
Denmark, claiming Alimex owned the arrested cargo, not
Bolshoretskoe, and threatening Daxin with criminal action.
Alimex’s lawyers copied this letter to the court and to
Daxin. Though confident that it was in the right, this
threat of criminal action did not sit well with Daxin. We
replied to Alimex’s lawyers by lecturing them on Chinese
and international law and by declaring that Alimex would
suffer even more losses if it insisted on pursuing
litigation in China instead of cooperation. The reaction
from Alimex’s lawyers was overwhelming. They wrote me a
letter filled with furious and derogatory words and stated
they would never communicate directly with us again. The
case had fallen into deadlock.
Despite the initially tough
attitude of Alimex’s lawyers, we knew we could not
abandon our efforts to achieve a settlement, particularly
since we knew settlement made sense for all parties. We
proposed a three way agreement between Daxin, Alimex and
Bolshoretskoe, whereby Alimex would keep its purchase
price funds and not pay any party for the fish until the
dispute between Daxin and Bolshoretskoe had been resolved
through arbitration in Canada. Alimex would then pay the
winner of the arbitration up to the purchase price of the
fish. Alimex would also agree not to pursue any claims
against Daxin for wrongful arrest. Upon the signing of
this agreement, Daxin would release its arrest of the
cargo. Daxin secured oral agreements from both
Bolshoretskoe and Alimex to go forward with such an
agreement.
For the fish to go out on
the next liner to Europe, Dan and I had to work overtime
in drafting the appropriate agreements. This time, the
multitude of languages and time zones (China, Russia,
Singapore, Seattle, and Denmark) worked to slow us down,
and by the time Bolshoretskoe received its Russian
language copy of the agreement, only a few hours remained
before the pollock needed to be loaded on the liner to
Europe. But, at the last minute, Bolshoretskoe changed its
mind and decided it would not sign. All our hard work had
been for naught. We were all exhausted.
The next liner to Europe
was leaving in six days. During the weekend, we stopped
talking with opposing parties and communicated with only
Dan and Daxin. We went back over the case history and
analyzed each party’s positions and risks. We concluded
that Bolshoretskoe was Daxin’s real adversary. It was
Bolshoretskoe that owed the money and it was Bolshoretskoe
that had avoided payment for so long. It also was
Bolshoretskoe that had backed out of its oral agreement.
There had been no prior conflicts between Daxin and
Alimex. Though Alimex was listed as the consignee of the
pollock on the Bill of lading, it had yet to actually pay
for the fish. Above all else, Alimex wanted the pollock
sent to Europe so it could fulfill its commitments with
its European buyers.
If we could persuade Alimex
to provide a deposit or the purchase price to the Qingdao
Maritime Court, we would lift our cargo arrest. If, on the
other hand, Alimex insisted on paying the purchase price
directly to Bolshoretskoe, the arrest would remain in
place, and Alimex would be unable to fulfill its supply
contracts with its European buyers. Daxin would be left
fighting a two front war against Alimex and Bolshoretskoe
in the Chinese courts.
We told Alimex that if it
did not immediately settle, we would move the court to
require Alimex pay the Pollock purchase price to the court
and seeking the immediate sale of the pollock at auction.
Within hours, we received contact from a Chinese lawyer
retained by Alimex, who would, he informed us, be going to
court to have our “illegal” arrest thrown out. The
court ignored him.
The next liner for Europe
was coming to Qingdao the next day and it finally began
dawning on Alimex that if it wanted to get the pollock to
Europe and to its customers, it would need to settle with
us. Intensive settlement talks began anew and another oral
agreement was reached. Alimex would guarantee to pay up to
the amount of the pollock purchase price to whomever
prevailed between Daxin and Bolshoretskoe. Alimex also
agreed not to pursue any claims against Daxin arising from
Daxin’s allegedly wrongful arrest of the cargo. A
settlement was drafted and signed and the parties worked
diligently to get the arrest lifted in time for the
product to make it on that day’s liner to Europe.
Daxin had a Guarantee
Agreement from an established and well funded Danish
company and we had achieved a smashing victory on this
exciting arrest of cross-border transshipping cargo.
Somewhat smooth sailing in
recovering Daxin’s award.
We then filed Daxin’s
case against Bolshoretskoe in the Qingdao Maritime Court.
Bolshoretskoe consistently failed to attend any court
hearings and we eventually secured a default judgment
against it.
Alimex then paid Daxin all
but US$15,000 of the amount it had guaranteed, but claimed
entitlement to withhold US$15,000 for itself to help pay
for the costs it had incurred in China defending against
Daxin’s arrest. One e-mail from Dan threatening
arbitration in London (pursuant to the Guarantee
Agreement) for the $15,000, plus all fees and costs,
convinced Alimex it had no case on this either. Alimex
paid the remaining US$15,000 to Daxin and the case was
over.
After six months, close
cooperation and flexibility by lawyers on both sides of
the Pacific had given us full and total victory.
Epilogue
A few months after I closed
the case, Dan sent me an e-mail telling me he had heard
from one of his Danish clients that Alimex’s Danish
lawyers had told them of our great job on this case. Dan
and I have since worked on a couple additional cases
together, but it will be this first one that I will always
remember. In thinking of this case, I know I will never
forget the sleepless nights I spent communicating with
lawyers and parties in four times zones. But I also know
that the pride I feel from knowing how much we achieved,
despite having to work through the laws of so many
countries under such tight deadlines, is what will always
stand out. Our wisdom, our legal knowledge and our
strenuous diligence had garnered us high praise not only
from our foreign colleague and from our client, but also
admiration from the opposing party. I share this honor
with Harris & Moure, with our Fada Law Firm and with
Qingdao’s Wincon Law Firm, and with our Chinese Lawyers.
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About
The Author
Zhao
Xiaomei (Meggie) is a senior partner at
the Fada law firm in Dalian, China, where
she focuses on international and maritime
law. |
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