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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Deutsche Bank AG (London Branch) v Central Bank of Venezuela & Ors [2023] EWCA Civ 742 (30 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/742.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 742 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
MRS JUSTICE COCKERILL DBE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PHILLIPS
and
LADY JUSTICE FALK
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DEUTSCHE BANK AG (LONDON BRANCH) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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CENTRAL BANK OF VENEZUELA - and – RECEIVERS And Between: BANCO CENTRAL DE VENEZUELA - and – THE GOVERNOR & COMPANY OF THE BANK OF ENGLAND - and – (1) THE "MADURO BOARD" (2) THE "GUAIDÓ BOARD" |
Defendant Receivers Claimant Defendant Appellant Respondent |
____________________
Andrew Fulton KC, Mark Tushingham and Manuel Casas (instructed by Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer (UK) LLP) for the Guaidó Board
Hearing dates: 23 and 24 May 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Falk:
Introduction
"(1) Courts in this jurisdiction are bound by the one voice principle to accept the statements of the executive which establish that Mr Guaidó is recognised by HMG as the constitutional interim President of Venezuela and that Mr Maduro is not recognised by HMG as President of Venezuela for any purpose. It is appropriate to grant declaratory relief to that effect.
(2) (a) There exists a rule of domestic law that, subject to important exceptions, courts in this jurisdiction will not adjudicate or sit in judgment on the lawfulness or validity under its own law of an executive act of a foreign state, performed within the territory of that state.
(b) There exists a rule of domestic law that, subject to important exceptions, courts in this jurisdiction will recognise and will not question the effect of a foreign state's legislation or other laws in relation to any acts which take place or take effect within the territory of that state.
Accordingly, subject to (3) below, courts in this jurisdiction will not question the lawfulness or validity of: (i) Decrees Nos 8 and 10 issued by Mr Guaidó; (ii) the appointment of the Special Attorney General; or (iii) the appointment of the Ad Hoc Administrative Board of the BCV (ie the Guaidó Board).
(3) However, in agreement with the Court of Appeal, I consider that, to the extent that the Maduro Board may rely on judgments of the STJ to which recognition or effect should be given by courts in this jurisdiction in accordance with domestic rules of private international law and the public policy of the forum, the rules identified in para 2(a) and (b) above would not be engaged. It is therefore necessary for the proceedings to be remitted to the Commercial Court for it to consider whether the judgments of the STJ should be recognised or given effect in this jurisdiction."
The facts before the judge
"The United Kingdom now recognises Juan Guaidó as the constitutional interim President of Venezuela, until credible presidential elections can be held.
The people of Venezuela have suffered enough. It is time for a new start, with free and fair elections in accordance with international democratic standards.
The oppression of the illegitimate, kleptocratic Maduro regime must end. Those who continue to violate the human rights of ordinary Venezuelans under an illegitimate regime will be called to account. The Venezuelan people deserve a better future."
a) Judgment CC/74/11.04.2019 ("Judgment 5"), determining the nullity of the appointment of Mr Hernández as SAG;
b) Judgment CC/247/25.07.2019 ("Judgment 6"), determining the nullity of the appointment of the Guaidó Board;
c) Judgment CC/3/29.01.20 ("Judgment 7"), reiterating that the office and appointment of a SAG were of no effect;
d) Judgment CC/059/22.04.20 ("Judgment 8") reiterating CC/74/11.04.2019 and declaring the legitimacy of acting Attorney General Muñoz; and
e) Judgment CC/67/26.05.20 ("Judgment 9"), declaring the appointment of the Board of Directors of the BCV (the Maduro Board) to be valid and the appointment of the ad hoc Board of the BCV (the Guaidó Board) and its acts to be null and void.
By the end of the appeal hearing the Maduro Board focused only on Judgments 6 and 9, contending that recognition of those judgments would be sufficient for its purposes.
The Judgment
Issue 1: whether the 10 STJ decisions pleaded by the Maduro Board limited the effect of the act of state doctrine in respect of the relevant executive acts relied on by the Guaidó Board, and specifically whether the court was limited to considering and giving effect to decisions that explicitly identified and declared prior executive acts to be nullities ("quashing decisions") as opposed to decisions which by their reasoning and effect demonstrated that fact.
Issue 2: in respect of any decisions that passed the relevant threshold, whether they were capable of being recognised as judgments in rem.
Issues 3-5: whether recognition of the judgments was nevertheless precluded by the operation of the one voice doctrine, principles of natural justice and/or guarantee of a fair trial, or as a matter of public policy.
"The court is as a matter of principle limited in these circumstances to considering or giving effect to STJ judgments that explicitly identify and declare prior Executive Acts to be nullities (or a sufficient specific, forward-looking ruling) (so-called "quashing decisions")."
There was common ground that the five STJ Decisions listed at [17] above met this criterion. The judge found, in agreement with the experts, that they declared the nullity of all acts of the NA and Mr Guaidó, including the nullity of the appointment of the Guaidó Board and its acts, and the validity of the Maduro Board and the appointment of its President, Mr Ortega.
The stay application
Factual developments
"On 30 December 2022 the 2015 National Assembly of Venezuela democratically voted to disband the interim government and the position of constitutional interim President held by Juan Guaidó, with effect from 5 January 2023.
We respect the result of this vote. We continue to consider the National Assembly elected in 2015 as the last democratically elected National Assembly in Venezuela, and take note of the Assembly's vote to extend its mandate for another year.
It remains the UK government's position that the 2018 presidential election was not held in accordance with international democratic standards. The UK continues not to accept the legitimacy of the administration put in place by Nicolás Maduro.
We will continue to work with our international partners to encourage all parties concerned to do everything necessary to bring about a return to democracy in Venezuela and to hold free, fair presidential elections in 2024, in accordance with international democratic standards. The restoration of democratic institutions and practices in Venezuela is essential and will help bring an end to the multiple crises
afflicting the Venezuelan people."
"We write to draw the Honourable Court's attention to the recent statement by David Rutley MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Americas and Caribbean), published on 12 January 2023. A copy of the Ministerial Statement is enclosed with this letter. It records that the National Assembly of Venezuela voted to disband the
interim government, and the position of constitutional interim President held by Juan Guaidó, with effect from 5 January 2023 and that the government respects the result of this vote.
The consequence of this statement is that the letter to the Court dated 19 March 2020, in response to its enquiry, no longer reflects the position of His Majesty's Government."
The basis for the stay application
Reasons
Grounds of appeal
Ground 1: that the judge should have held that the STJ Decisions were essentially in rem or sufficiently akin to in rem judgments for the purposes of recognition, given their erga omnes effect, there being no material distinction between those two concepts in determining authority to act on behalf of a central bank.
Ground 2: that the judge was wrong to adopt a "starting point" approach in finding that recognition of the STJ Decisions would conflict with the one voice doctrine, rather than considering the reasoning in the judgments and determining whether it could be properly distinguished and severed.
Ground 3: that the judge erred in fact and law in determining that there was a serious breach of natural justice and the denial of a fair trial, and ought to have found that domestic remedies were available that addressed that issue.
Permission to appeal was sought from the Court of Appeal in respect of a fourth ground, relating to costs, but was refused.
One voice
The parties' submissions
Timing argument: relevant case law
"There is ample authority for the proposition that the recognition by the British Government of a new government of a foreign country has at least this effect. It enables and requires the courts of this country to regard as valid not only acts done by the new government after its recognition but also acts done by it before its recognition in so far as those acts related to matters under its control at the time when the acts were done. But there appears to be no English authority which goes beyond that."
Lord Reid went on to emphasise (at p.45) that "we cannot recognize two different governments of the same country at the same time", but:
"I do not think that it is inconsistent with this principle to say that the recognition of the new government has certain retroactive effects, but that the recognition of the old government remains effective down to the date when it was in fact withdrawn."
He also recognised the possibility that a successor government could undo or nullify legislative or administrative acts of its predecessor, but there was no evidence that any attempt had been made to do so in that case.
"Subsequent recognition de jure of a new government as the result of successful insurrection can in certain cases annul a sale of goods by a previous government. If the previous government sells goods which belong to it but are situated in territory effectively occupied at the time by insurgent forces acting on behalf of what is already a de facto new government, the sale may be valid if the insurgents are afterwards defeated and possession of the goods is regained by the old government. But if the old government never regains the goods and the de facto new government becomes recognized by H.M. Government as the de jure government, purchasers from the old government will not be held in her Majesty's courts to have a good title after that recognition.
Primarily, at any rate, retroactivity of recognition operates to validate acts of a de facto government which has subsequently become the new de jure government, and not to invalidate acts of the previous de jure government."
Thus, while recognition could in some cases operate retroactively to validate acts of a de facto government that had subsequently become a de jure government, it could not invalidate acts of the previous de jure government which did not relate to property situated in an area already under the control of the de facto government.
Timing argument: discussion
The starting point approach
"170. The focus of the present case therefore shifts to the status of the judgments of the STJ on which the Maduro Board relies. These judgments do not themselves attract the protection of any act of state rule. The question becomes whether, and if so to what extent, they should be recognised or given effect by courts in this jurisdiction. These are matters which fall outside the preliminary issues and which have not been addressed in argument before us. It will, accordingly, be necessary to remit this issue for further consideration by the Commercial Court. One matter, however, is clear. Courts in this jurisdiction will refuse to recognise or give effect to foreign judgments such as those of the STJ if to do so would conflict with domestic public policy. On this appeal we have not been taken to the judgments in question and the Commercial Court will have to address this issue among others when the matter is remitted to it. It is important to note at this point, however, that the public policy of the forum will necessarily include the fundamental rule of UK constitutional law that the executive and the judiciary must speak with one voice on issues relating to the recognition of foreign states, governments and heads of state. As a result, if and to the extent that the reasoning of the STJ leading to its decisions that acts of Mr Guaidó are unlawful and nullities depends on the view that he is not the President of Venezuela, those judicial decisions cannot be recognised or given effect by courts in this jurisdiction because to do so would conflict with the view of the United Kingdom executive."
"Furthermore, it must be emphasised once again that effect could only be given to such foreign judgments subject to the overriding operation of the public policy of the forum which will necessarily include the effective application of the one voice principle. As a result, no recognition or effect could be given to a judgment of the STJ if and to the extent that to do so would conflict with the recognition by HMG of Mr Guaidó as the interim President of Venezuela."
Severability: the STJ decisions now relied on
Severability: documentary evidence of foreign law
Severability: the judge's reasoning
"205. To the extent that this does matter I would again concur with the arguments advanced for the Guaidó Board that the position of Mr Guaidó is inextricably linked to the reasoning of the cases. There may be cases where an executive act could be challenged without impugning the position of the actor – for example if the law of Venezuela required not simply a declaration of an executive act, but also public promulgation in a particular way, and the challenge was based on that promulgation having been completely omitted). But in this case the issue is about the Executive Acts as acts of Mr Guaidó. To some extent it may be said (as the passage above illustrates) that the reasoning comes from a Maduro-centred place as opposed to focussing on the acts – it takes as a given the legitimacy of Mr Maduro's presidency; but that is an approach which as a logical correlate assumes the illegitimacy of Mr Guaidó's position. That proposition is interwoven throughout the judgments; it is part of the warp and the weft of the argument.
206. The main way that the analysis can produce a result which had a reason other than Mr Guaidó's position is by focussing on the position of the National Assembly. This was where Mr Arias's analysis focussed.
"since such acts of the National Assembly in contempt are null, non-existent and ineffective, so are all the presumed executive acts that may follow the null acts of the Assembly: all, without exception, that are a consequence, direct or indirect, of those; that is to say, those which may be issued, derived from the supposed legislative acts of the National Assembly in contempt, namely (decrees, resolutions, agreement, statutes, etc.). Thus, it is considered that they are void of absolute nullity and lack legal effects, are ineffective and non-existent, by virtue of the state of contempt incurred by the National Assembly"
207. This was the way that the point was put to Prof. Brewer-Carías:
"All the rulings derive from the conclusion of the Constitutional Chamber, preceded by the Electoral Chamber, that the actions of the National Assembly are null, as you put it, and their view as regards Mr Guaidó, two separate causes."
208. The problem with this is that these are not two truly separate causes, in the sense that the same point actually underpins both of these.
209. Similarly while it is common ground that the Judgments "declare the acts of Mr Guaidó null, repudiate his status as president of Venezuela, and declare he had usurped that position, without prejudice to other grounds contained in the ruling" the words "without prejudice" do not connote a separate and distinct analysis, but cover the difference in view between the experts as to whether there is a separate and distinct analysis.
210. On this, the views of Prof Brewer-Carías are to be preferred. The fact that the acts of the National Assembly predate those of Mr Guaidó as Interim President do not make his acts qua Interim President any less the starting point for the STJ conclusion that they are ineffective. The Post-2019 Judgments (i.e. Judgments 4-10 in the table above) do not have a basis entirely separate from any issue as to whom carries the title of the incumbent President of Venezuela. The argument as to the National Assembly is not a separate basis for striking down the Executive Acts, which are acts of Mr Guaidó; what it is, is a step on the way to Mr Guaidó's position. The position of Mr Guaidó and the position of the legislature which put him in that position is incapable of being distinguished or disentwined. They are both part of a single common theme.
211. The STJ sees Mr Guaidó's acts as invalid because it sees him not as Interim President but as a private citizen; and it sees him as a private citizen because it does not recognise the acts of the National Assembly which he would say gave him that power. It is not (as the Maduro Board submitted) that HMG recognises Mr Guaidó as Interim President and not as leader of the National Assembly; Mr Guaidó's claim to recognition comes not from anything innate to him, but via the National Assembly. Therefore by impugning the National Assembly's actions, the STJ impugns Mr Guaidó's appointment which forms the basis of his recognition. And again the judgments are richly littered with statements which either state that Mr Maduro is President, or which assume that he is so (and that his appointments are valid). I therefore accept the submission that this is not a "blue pencil" exercise. This is a case where the nature of the arguments are such that they are binary, and the different manifestations of that, binary view are inseparable the one from the other."
Severability: discussion
"The reasoning of all the rulings considered above is based on the assumption that the acts of Mr. Juan Guaidó are illegal and null because he is not the President of Venezuela."
Later in the joint memorandum Professor Brewer-Carías observed that the rulings declaring Mr Guaidó's acts to be null "implies Mr. Juan Guaidó is not recognized as Interim President of Venezuela", in disagreement with the view of Mr Arias that the reasoning "does not depend on the opinion that he is not the President of Venezuela".
Summary and Conclusion
Lord Justice Phillips:
Lord Justice Males: