OceanGate
The basic principles of contract
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Much has been made of OceanGate’s release of liability, and whether an onslaught of litigation might be on its way, so we thought we should have a look at it. See the panel left. But before getting to the verbiage, the preliminary question: ''is it even worth taking legal action''?
Is OceanGate even worth suing?
Doubtful. With estimated operating revenue of USD10m per annum and 45 staff,[1] having just had to mount a desperate deep sea rescue probably not got much left to recover. Now, maybe, OceanGate had public liability insurance but, as the submersible was an unregulated vehicle operating in international waters it doesn’t seem likely, and if it did, look out for that schedule of exclusions. Since there was (Q.E.D) no regulatory requirement for insurance, we wonder what appetite there would be amongst underwriters to take on what was, on its face, enormous risk.
If you were a public liability insurer would you insure “an experimental submersible vessel that has not been approved or certified by any regulatory body and may be constructed of materials that have not been widely used in human occupied submersibles?”
What might OceanGate be liable for?
What is the contract? This “release” is written as if it is some auxiliary agreement, a side letter to a main contract of carriage.
It is a contract to take you down to the ocean floor and bring you back in one piece. Failing to do that brings some kind of liability for not providing the fruit of the contract, which we can take it that the passengers valued at the alleged $250,000 they are rumoured to have paid each.
There is the small matter of whether the accident, itself, arose by breach of contract.
What does the disclaimer claim to cover?
Inherent risks
For the main, the Release is designed to cover all the “inherent” risks which may arise as a result of an expedition to the ocean floor. These are the sorts of regrettable things that just happen when you are at the frontiers of humankind’s discovery. Unexpected things happen. kinds of risks Includes those of experimental, in approved vehicle.
Negligence of Released Parties
The Release purports explicitly to exclude the negligence of Released Persons:
“I hereby assume full responsibility for the risk of bodily injury, disability, death, and property damage due to the negligence of any Released Party while involved in the operation.”
Would the disclaimer work?
Governed by Bahamas law, for which the ultimate court of appeal is the Privy Counsel[2] which must apply Bahamian law, but as a common law jurisdiction, outside specific legislation, assume it will be broadly along the same lines as for English common law.
However in this case English law is and Bahamian law probably is governed by statute. The statutes are different.
Under Section 2(1)[3] of the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977, under English Law you cannot exclude liability for death or personal injury caused by negligence:
“A person cannot by reference to any contract term or to a notice given to persons generally or to particular persons exclude or restrict his liability for death or personal injury resulting from negligence.”
But Bahamas law has its own framework, which includes the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Act of 2007,[4] which presumptively regards an exclusion of liability for death or personal injury in a standard form contract as unfair and therefore not binding on the consumer (being a natural person acting “for purposes which are outside his business”):
“Indicative and Illustrative List of Terms which may be Regarded as Unfair
1. Terms which have the object or effect of —
- (a) excluding or limiting the legal liability of a seller or supplier in the event of the death of a consumer or personal injury to the latter resulting from an act or omission of that seller or supplier; [...]
But was there negligence? Good luck figuring that out. Most likely an omission rather than a commission — failing to check the hull integrity, not noticing stress fractures and so on.
Puts into perspective our banking disclaimer, though, doesn’t it.