jueves, 2 de junio de 2016

Laytime and Demurrage. Speech by John Schofield on the 30th anniversary of the texbook.

Laytime and Demurrage Reception – 26th May 2016 – John Schofield’s  Address

My Lord’s, ladies and gentlemen,

On behalf of Taylor and Francis, their parent company, Informa, as well as Michael Daiches and myself, may we welcome you to this Reception to mark the 30th anniversary of the publication of the first edition of my book, Laytime and Demurrage in 1986 and the publication of the 7th edition earlier this year.  It also marks 35 years of Mike Daiches’ tenure as Editor of Lloyd’s Maritime Law Newsletter.
The origins of the concept of Laytime and Demurrage,  can, as Chapter One of the 7th edition of my book makes clear,  via the Laws of Oleron and  Eleanor of Acquitaine, the wife first of Henry VII of France, then Henry II of England (who is in the news this week, which has been dubbed Henry II week for what happened to Thomas a Becket),   be traced back to the Lex Rhodia which governed trade in the Mediterranean for over a thousand years. It was Eleanor who was also   the mother of Richard I, Richard the Lionheart, and regent whilst he was away at the crusades,  who introduced  the laws of Oleron, part of her native Acquitaine,  into English law.
My own connections with the sea and maritime matters, do not go back quite that far, but they do go back  55 years to when I joined  Dartmouth or Britannia Royal Naval College,  HMS DARTMOUTH to give it its full name, in 1961. I am particularly pleased to see 2 of those who joined the Navy with me, so long ago, with us today.  In those days, there was no graduate entry to Dartmouth so I went straight from school.
A few years later when Mike Daiches joined, he already had a law degree.
I joined as a General List officer and the Murray Scheme of entry, under which I joined  provided for a four year training cycle before being given my first complement job.  That involved time at Dartmouth undergoing partly professional and partly academic training,  a term as a Cadet in the Dartmouth Training Squadron and a year in the fleet as a Midshipman.  The wider experience I gained in that period ranged from a number of hours flying training in Tiger Moth biplanes at Robourgh airport, made of wood and canvas, doing low altitude bomb attacks on the Cape Wrath lighthouse in Hawker Hunter jets  and even submarine escape training from a 100 foot tower at HMS DOLPHIN at Gosport to stripping down a diesel engine and rebuilding it in the workshops at Dartmouth. I can assure you that if you have ever done a loop the loop in an open cockpit biplane and looked up at the ground, that is something  you will not forget.
At the end of the 4 year cycle having gained a certificate of competence  as a daytime bridge watch keeper and an Ocean Navigation Certifcate confirming my competence at star and sun sights , I was one of half a dozen officers provisionally selected for full time legal training lasting  approaching 4 years, the first two years being to get up to law degree standard, then the Bar Professional  Training Course, call to the Bar and finally pupillage. The Navy’s thinking at the time was that you can turn a sailor into a lawyer but not the other way round.  That half dozen provisionally selected was eventually reduced to two to actually undergo legal training  and I was one of the two so selected to start training at the Inns of Court School of Law here in Gray’s Inn in 1972, after eleven years in the Navy. It was also in 1972 that I joined Gray’s Inn.
Amongst those I met when I arrived at Gray’s Inn was my good friend Jim Collins, who is with us today and who can fairly be described at the Godfather of Laytime and Demurrage.  Having returned from Uganda, where he was a teacher, Jim decided to strike out in a new direction and read for the Bar, but because his first degree was in Physics and pure Mathematics, he also was required to do  the course at the Inns of Court School of Law to get up to law degree standard, as did another friend of ours, Guy Jones, who is due to go into hospital today for an operation tomorrow and who we wish well, who also had to do the degree standard course, even though he did have a law degree, although one issued by Perth Univerity, that is Perth in Western Australia.  After we were each called to the Bar, we all  went our separate ways, me back to the Navy,  I left the Navy in 1980, my last job being standing by HMS GLASGOW during fitting out in Swan Hunter’s Shipyard and participating in extended sea trials of over 6 months with her, invaluable experience for dealing with shipbuilding disputes.
On leaving the Navy, I  got a job with Bilbrough’s the Managers of the London P&I Club, handling the full range of P&I and Defence cases, including laytime and demurrage cases.  Jim, who by then had gone back to teaching, but this time teaching law at what is now part of Middlesex University,  persuaded me to do a 2 year part time course at what is now the Guildhall University, resulting in me gaining a Master’s degree in Business law.
Jim then approached Lloyds of London press, saying he would like to write a law book asking what would they like it to be on. They said they would like a book on  Laytime and Demurrage.  He said he didn’t know anything about laytime and demurrage  but he knew someone who did, me, so we signed a contract that we would produce a 150,000 word draft  within 12 months.
Towards the end of that period, in mid 1984, Jim got the offer of an excellent job in Hong Kong, which he naturally accepted.  By then I had written 10,000 words but had also done a lot of research, which left me with the decision of whether to complete the project on my own or abandon it.  I decided to complete it.  The first edition in those pre-desk top days was produced on a manual portable typewriter with the aid of a bottle of snopake.
There is a quotation about writing this sort of book from Sir Winston Churhill, who said:
“It starts off as a mild flirtation, it becomes a love affair, a deep and passionate matter and when you can stand the pain no more, it is flung upon an ungrateful public.”
The first part is certainly true, but perhaps not the last.
For at least the last six months before completion,  I was starting work on the book at 5 am, working for a couple of hours and then going off to my day job at Bilbrough’s plus working at least one full day each weekend.  It put quite a strain on my family to whom, I would like to say sorry, to  my daughters who are with us here tonight   and  their mother, who is unable to be with us tonight. 
Anyway it was eventually done 2 years late and I delivered the manuscript to the publishers, who I assumed would send it to a High Court judge or some other eminent lawyer to pronounce on its worth.  However just 6 weeks later, I got a phone call from Ted, the production man at Lloyds asking if I could read the proofs.  Incidentally that production time was much quicker than any subsequent edition.   [show first edition]
The second edition  was published in 1990, by which time I had left Bilbrough’s and become a director of Ravenscroft Shipping, a firm of Baltic Exchange shipbrokers and London Agents for various South American ship owners and Chartering interests and a Principal on the Baltic Exchange, and this second edition together with the third edition of Time Charters, published the previous year and the first edition of The Ratification of Maritime Comventions  also published in 1990, formed the basis of the Lloyd’s Shipping Law series, which currently  stands at 28 titles.
In the early 1990s, I was asked by Texaco to analyse and report on the demurrage due in respect of 250 voyages in respect of which they were in dispute with the  US Internal Revenue Service and for which Texaco bought me my first computer.  That was my introduction to the world of computers.  A couple of weeks before I was due to give evidence in Houston. Texaco settled their dispute.
In September 1993, I was approached by Mr Zhang Yong Jian, the Deputy Managing Director of Dalian Ocean Shipping Co, part of the Cosco Group, who asked my permission to translate my book, Laytime and Demurrage into Chinese, a request I passed on the publishers.   They gave their approval to this project and this is the results of his labours in the familiar Lloyds Shipping law colours.  I must say that producing a Chinese translation must have been an even more daunting task than writing the book in the first place.  Laytime and Demurrage is, as far as I know, the only major English law text book to be translated into Chinese.
The Maritime Law Newsletter was first published in 1979 and the very first edition contained a relatively short report of a laytime and demurrage arbitration case.  Mike Daiches has taken  that concept of reporting awards in an anonymous form  and developed it with such awards now being reported in a numbered series.  In 2015, 19 such cases were reported, of which I was a member of the tribunal in 10 of them, and drafted 9 of those awards.
Laytime and Demurrage was the first text book to include reports of Arbitration awards as published in the Newsletter, and did so from the first edition. All the major text books have now adopted this practice.
I am sometimes asked if the majority of my arbitration cases are laytime and demurrage cases.  The answer is that normally only a small proportion are such cases.  I mentioned the Texaco cases earlier.  However,  I and two senior LMAA colleagues are about to publish an award relating to a COA and the demurrage due in respect of 81 disputed voyages plus sums due under the Asbatankvoy form of charter ice clause. Although every voyage charter has an ice clause relating to delays due to ice,  there are remarkably few cases relating to such delays and the last reported case was in the 1920s, almost 100 years ago. The total sum  in issue in this case is around USD 4.5, million.most of which is demurrage
London Arbitration is sometimes criticised as slow and costly. I would only mention that earlier this year, as sole arbitrator, I published two awards for unpaid freight, in each case approaching USD 1.5 million.  Each case took just 22 days from presentation of Claims submissions to publication of the award and the cost of each was only £2,500 less than that payable under the Small Claims procedure.  I contrast that with a challenge in the High Court made to an award I published last year. Submissions relating to the application for leave to appeal were completed in August, but it took until the end of February this year, over six months, for the High Court to reject the application, which they did in a half page email stating that the application was unjustified.
I will ask Mike Daiches  if he wishes to add anything and after he has done so, I would invite you all to enjoy yourselves and circulate widely, and talk not  just to those you already  know, but talk to those both younger and older than yourself.  You will certainly make new acquaintances and possibly new friends.

Thank you very much.