Crescent Petroleum, Ltd. v. MV Lok Maheshwari, G.R. No. 155014, November 11, 2005
Crescent Petroleum, Ltd. v. MV Lok Maheshwari, G.R. No. 155014, November 11, 2005
Crescent Petroleum, Ltd. v. MV Lok Maheshwari, G.R. No. 155014, November 11, 2005
ISSUE:
Whether the Philippine court has or will exercise jurisdiction and
entitled to maritime lien under our laws on foreign vessel docked
on Philippine port and supplies furnished to a vessel in a foreign
port?
RULING:
In a suit to establish and enforce a maritime lien for supplies
furnished to a vessel in a foreign port, whether such lien exists, or
whether the court has or will exercise jurisdiction, depends on the
law of the country where the supplies were furnished, which must
be pleaded and proved.
The Lauritzen-Romero-Rhoditis trilogy of cases, which replaced
such single-factor methodologies as the law of the place of supply.
The multiple-contact test to determine, in the absence of a specific
Congressional directive as to the statutes reach, which
jurisdictions law should be applied. The following factors were
considered: (1) place of the wrongful act; (2) law of the flag; (3)
allegiance or domicile of the injured; (4) allegiance of the
defendant shipowner; (5) place of contract; (6) inaccessibility of
foreign forum; and (7) law of the forum. This is applicable not only
to personal injury claims arising under the Jones Act but to all
matters arising under maritime law in general
The Court cannot sustain petitioner Crescents insistence on the
application of P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978
and hold that a maritime lien exists. Out of the seven basic factors
listed in the case of Lauritzen, Philippine law only falls under one
the law of the forum. All other elements are foreign Canada is
the place of the wrongful act, of the allegiance or domicile of the
injured and the place of contract; India is the law of the flag and
the allegiance of the defendant shipowner. Applying P.D. No.
1521,a maritime lien exists would not promote the public policy
behind the enactment of the law to develop the domestic shipping
SECOND DIVISION
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
3.
4.
domestic. It points out further that the law does not indicate that
the supplies or necessaries must be furnished in the Philippines in
order to give petitioner the right to seek enforcement of the lien
with a Philippine court.[11]
Respondents Vessel and SCI, on the other hand, maintain
that Section 21 of the P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree
of 1978 does not apply to a foreign supplier like petitioner
Crescent as the provision refers only to a situation where the
person furnishing the supplies is situated inside the territory of the
Philippines and not where the necessaries were furnished in a
foreign jurisdiction like Canada.[12]
We find against petitioner Crescent.
I.
P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 was
enacted to accelerate the growth and development of the
shipping industry and to extend the benefits accorded to
overseas shipping under Presidential Decree No. 214 to domestic
shipping.[13] It is patterned closely from the U.S. Ship Mortgage
Act of 1920 and the Liberian Maritime Law relating to preferred
mortgages.[14] Notably, Sections 21, 22 and 23 of P.D. No. 1521 or
the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 are identical to Subsections P,
Q, and R, respectively, of the U.S. Ship Mortgage Act of 1920,
which is part of the Federal Maritime Lien Act. Hence, U.S.
jurisprudence finds relevance to determining whether P.D. No.
1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 applies in the present
case.
The various tests used in the U.S. to determine whether a
maritime lien exists are the following:
even if they are not entitled to a maritime lien under their laws will
encourage forum shopping.
II.
Finding guidance from the foregoing decisions, the Court
cannot sustain petitioner Crescents insistence on the application
of P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 and hold
that a maritime lien exists.
First. Out of the seven basic factors listed in the case
of Lauritzen, Philippine law only falls under one the law of the
forum. All other elements are foreign Canada is the place of the
wrongful act, of the allegiance or domicile of the injured and the
place of contract; India is the law of the flag and the allegiance of
the defendant shipowner. Balancing these basic interests, it is
inconceivable that the Philippine court has any interest in the case
that outweighs the interests of Canada or India for that matter.
Second. P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of
1978 is inapplicable following the factors under Restatement
(Second) of Conflict of Laws. Like the Federal Maritime Lien Act
of the U.S., P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978
was enacted primarily to protect Filipino suppliers and was not
intended to create a lien from a contract for supplies between
foreign entities delivered in a foreign port.
Third. Applying P.D. No. 1521 or the Ship Mortgage
Decree of 1978 and rule that a maritime lien exists would not
promote the public policy behind the enactment of the law to
develop the domestic shipping industry. Opening up our courts to
foreign suppliers by granting them a maritime lien under our laws
III.
But under which law should petitioner Crescent prove the
existence of its maritime lien?
In light of the interests of the various foreign elements
involved, it is clear that Canada has the most significant interest in
this dispute. The injured party is a Canadian corporation, the subcharterer which placed the orders for the supplies is also
Canadian, the entity which physically delivered the bunker fuels is
in Canada, the place of contracting and negotiation is in Canada,
and the supplies were delivered in Canada.
The arbitration clause contained in the Bunker Fuel
Agreement which states that New York law governs the
construction, validity and performance of the contract is only a
factor that may be considered in the choice-of-law analysis but is
not conclusive. As in the cases of Gulf Trading and Swedish
Telecom, the lien that is the subject matter of this case arose by
operation of law and not by contract because the shipowner was
not a party to the contract under which the goods were supplied.
It is worthy to note that petitioner Crescent never alleged
and proved Canadian law as basis for the existence of a maritime
lien. To the end, it insisted on its theory that Philippine law
Thus, we are left with two choices: (1) dismiss the case for
petitioners failure to establish a cause of action [31] or (2) presume
that Canadian law is the same as Philippine law. In either case,
the case has to be dismissed.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
DANTE O. TINGA
Associate Justice
(on leave)
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO
Associate Justice
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, it is
hereby certified that the conclusions in the above Decision were
reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer
of the opinion of the Courts Division.
SO ORDERED.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Acting Chief Justice
On leave.
[12]
Id., p. 469.
[1]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
35 F. 907.
[17]
230 F. 717.
[18]
278 F. 568.
[19]
17 F.2d 308.
[2]
[3]
[4]
[20]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
Rollo, p. 315.
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24]
[25]
[34]
Agbayani, p. 631.
[35]
TSN, p. 6.
[36]
[37]