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Transatlantica Commodities v Eurochem Trading: when late is not the same as done

19 Jun 2026Court Report
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Transatlantica Commodities v Eurochem Trading: when late is not the same as done

The Commercial Court dismisses a shipowner's appeal, confirming that an unfulfilled voyage obligation cannot be remedied by a later, different one.

There is a deceptively simple idea at the heart of Transatlantica Commodities Pte Ltd v Eurochem Trading GmbH [2026] EWHC 1494 (Comm): doing something late is not the same as not doing it at all. The distinction sounds obvious, but the owners in this case built an entire appeal on collapsing it, and Mr Justice Henshaw's judgement, handed down on 18 June 2026, confirms they were wrong to try.

The dispute arose from a contract of affreightment for the carriage of fertiliser cargoes from Estonia to Brazil and North America across a six-month window in 2020. When charterers declared a laycan of 12 to 15 October 2020 for the third shipment, owners simply had no vessel available. Their response was blunt: "we don't have ship for October and this is earliest we have." The earliest they had was November. Charterers, understandably, went to the open market, fixed the "Abtenauer" at considerably higher rates, and reserved their rights to claim the difference.

So far, so familiar. The more interesting legal question arose from what happened next. The parties subsequently agreed that owners' vessel, the "Friedrich Schulte", would carry a different cargo under the contract the following month. Owners argued before the arbitral tribunal, and then before Henshaw J on appeal, that this later shipment amounted to delayed performance of the October obligation, and that charterers could not simultaneously claim the cost of the Abtenauer fixture and take the benefit of the Friedrich Schulte voyage at contract rates. To allow both, owners said, would hand charterers a windfall equivalent to four shipments under a contract that entitled them to only three.

Jacobs J had granted permission to appeal on that basis, noting that in a rising market the benefit of a later shipment at below-market contract rates seemed difficult to treat as irrelevant. The argument had surface appeal. It did not survive scrutiny.

Henshaw J's analysis turns on a careful reading of the tribunal's own findings, which owners had, in his view, fundamentally mischaracterised. The tribunal had never found that the Friedrich Schulte shipment was delayed performance of the October voyage. On the contrary, it had expressly accepted charterers' characterisation of owners' 7 October 2020 message as a refusal to perform, and had confirmed that the relevant cargo had already been lifted by the Abtenauer before the Friedrich Schulte was ever nominated. There was nothing left for owners to perform, late or otherwise.

The judgement draws on a principle with a long pedigree in shipping law. Each voyage under a contract of affreightment is a separate adventure, as Lord Atkinson articulated as long ago as 1923 in Larrinaga v Société Franco-Americaine des Phosphates, and as the Court of Appeal reaffirmed in Classic Maritime v Limbungan [2019]. The October shipment and the November shipment were not the same obligation in different clothes; they involved different cargoes, different dates, and different commercial circumstances. Owners' primary obligation in respect of October had been extinguished by their own refusal, replaced by a secondary liability in damages. The Friedrich Schulte voyage was simply a different adventure that charterers were entitled to exercise as their fourth declaration under the contract.

The windfall argument, therefore, rested on a false premise. Charterers had not secured four shipments at contract rates. They had secured two at contract rates, paid market rates for the third, and claimed the differential. That is orthodox contractual damages.

The practical lesson is one that parties to voyage charter arrangements would do well to absorb before they find themselves in similar correspondence. A clear refusal to perform a freestanding obligation does not become delayed performance merely because further business is transacted between the same parties under the same contract. Rights reserved are rights preserved, and no amount of subsequent commercial accommodation will silently extinguish an accrued claim unless that intention is expressed in unambiguous terms.

Owners' appeal was dismissed.

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There is a deceptively simple idea at the heart of Transatlantica Commodities Pte Ltd v Eurochem Trading GmbH [2026] EWHC 1494 (Comm): doing something late is not the same as not doing it at all. The distinction sounds obvious, but the owners in this case built an entire appeal on collapsing it, and Mr Justice Henshaw's judgement, handed down on 18 June 2026, confirms they were wrong to try.

The dispute arose from a contract of affreightment for the carriage of fertiliser cargoes from Estonia to Brazil and North America across a six-month window in 2020. When charterers declared a laycan of 12 to 15 October 2020 for the third shipment, owners simply had no vessel available. Their response was blunt: "we don't have ship for October and this is earliest we have." The earliest they had was November. Charterers, understandably, went to the open market, fixed the "Abtenauer" at considerably higher rates, and reserved their rights to claim the difference.

So far, so familiar. The more interesting legal question arose from what happened next. The parties subsequently agreed that owners' vessel, the "Friedrich Schulte", would carry a different cargo under the contract the following month. Owners argued before the arbitral tribunal, and then before Henshaw J on appeal, that this later shipment amounted to delayed performance of the October obligation, and that charterers could not simultaneously claim the cost of the Abtenauer fixture and take the benefit of the Friedrich Schulte voyage at contract rates. To allow both, owners said, would hand charterers a windfall equivalent to four shipments under a contract that entitled them to only three.

Jacobs J had granted permission to appeal on that basis, noting that in a rising market the benefit of a later shipment at below-market contract rates seemed difficult to treat as irrelevant. The argument had surface appeal. It did not survive scrutiny.

Henshaw J's analysis turns on a careful reading of the tribunal's own findings, which owners had, in his view, fundamentally mischaracterised. The tribunal had never found that the Friedrich Schulte shipment was delayed performance of the October voyage. On the contrary, it had expressly accepted charterers' characterisation of owners' 7 October 2020 message as a refusal to perform, and had confirmed that the relevant cargo had already been lifted by the Abtenauer before the Friedrich Schulte was ever nominated. There was nothing left for owners to perform, late or otherwise.

The judgement draws on a principle with a long pedigree in shipping law. Each voyage under a contract of affreightment is a separate adventure, as Lord Atkinson articulated as long ago as 1923 in Larrinaga v Société Franco-Americaine des Phosphates, and as the Court of Appeal reaffirmed in Classic Maritime v Limbungan [2019]. The October shipment and the November shipment were not the same obligation in different clothes; they involved different cargoes, different dates, and different commercial circumstances. Owners' primary obligation in respect of October had been extinguished by their own refusal, replaced by a secondary liability in damages. The Friedrich Schulte voyage was simply a different adventure that charterers were entitled to exercise as their fourth declaration under the contract.

The windfall argument, therefore, rested on a false premise. Charterers had not secured four shipments at contract rates. They had secured two at contract rates, paid market rates for the third, and claimed the differential. That is orthodox contractual damages.

The practical lesson is one that parties to voyage charter arrangements would do well to absorb before they find themselves in similar correspondence. A clear refusal to perform a freestanding obligation does not become delayed performance merely because further business is transacted between the same parties under the same contract. Rights reserved are rights preserved, and no amount of subsequent commercial accommodation will silently extinguish an accrued claim unless that intention is expressed in unambiguous terms.

Owners' appeal was dismissed.

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