On 10 September 2017, the Greek-flagged tanker Agia Zoni II sank while anchored at Piraeus port. The vessel was carrying 2,200 mt of fuel oil and 370 mt of gas oil. Some 500 mt of oil leaked. After the incident, the vessel's insurance company submitted a declaration of limitation of liability in accordance with art 7 of the CLC 1992, and a limitation fund was constituted.
In 2021, the claimant initiated civil proceedings against the IOPC Fund without first submitting its claims to the limitation fund. The claimant was a beachfront company which claimed business suspension costs, clean-up costs, rent reductions, and losses of profits. The IOPC Fund had already paid the claimant for clean-up costs.
The Multimember Court of First Instance of Piraeus, Shipping Division, decided that after the constitution of the limitation fund the claimant had no right to initiate any claim directly against the IOPC Fund, and the fact that it chose not to participate in the collective compensation proceedings against the limitation fund did not constitute a legal basis for the relevant civil action. The claimant appealed to the Three Member Court of Appeal of Piraeus.
Held: The appeal is dismissed.
The claimant argued as follows:
The Court of Appeal held that art 4 of the Fund Convention 1992 provides that additional compensation is paid by the IOPC Fund where claimants do not receive full compensation on the basis of the CLC 1992. This may occur in the following cases: a) the damage exceeds the shipowner's liability under CLC 1992; b) the shipowner is not liable under the CLC 1992 because of the reason which caused the damage; or c) the shipowner is not financially able to meet his obligations under CLC 1992 in full and the insurance is insufficient to satisfy valid claims for compensation. It is considered that the last case occurs when the victim could not be fully satisfied with the amount of compensation which is foreseen by the CLC 1992 after taking every logical measure in accordance to the judicial protection provided to it.
This leads to the conclusion that for the claimant to turn to the IOPC Fund, it first has to participate in the collective proceedings which commence with the constitution of a limitation fund by the shipowner. Although this is not explicitly provided for in the CLC 1992 or in the national laws which ratified the CLC 1992 and the Fund Convention 1992 in Greece, a contrary interpretation would violate the general principle of equal treatment of claimants who are in the same position.
Therefore the claimant's individual action on the ground that its claim against the IOPC Fund is subject to a special three-year and, under certain conditions, six-year limitation period, which run in parallel with the collective procedure for the examination of claims and the drafting of the table for their compensation, and are not interrupted nor prolonged in accordance to arts 285 and 286 of the new Code of Private Maritime Law of Greece (CMPL), is not permitted, because a different interpretation would relieve the claimant from its obligation to comply with the parallel collective proceedings. For this reason, art 251 of the new CMPL, which is in force as from 1 May 2023, provides that if a limitation fund is constituted, a civil proceeding against the IOPC Fund in accordance with art 7 of the Fund Convention 1992 is rejected as unacceptable if a claim has not been submitted to the liquidator (art 251.1 of the new CMPL), and if a claim has been submitted to the liquidator, the court which is examining the civil proceeding against the IOPC Fund in accordance with art 7 of the Fund Convention 1992 postpones the issuance of final judgment until the final table of distribution is made (art 251.2 of the new CMPL).
After the constitution of a limitation fund which corresponds to the provisions of art 5 of the CLC 1992, the claimant should have first submitted its claim for it to be examined by the liquidator and included in the table of claims. The Court of First Instance correctly interpreted the law. The arguments to the contrary set out in the grounds of appeal must be rejected as unfounded.