BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Plaza BV v The Law Debenture Trust Corporation Plc [2015] EWHC 43 (Ch) (16 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/43.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 43 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
PLAZA BV |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
THE LAW DEBENTURE TRUST CORPORATION PLC |
Defendant |
____________________
Richard Snowden QC, Andrew Clutterbuck QC and Sharif Shivji (instructed by Eversheds LLP) for the defendant
Hearing dates: 29 and 30 October 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman :
Background
- Three bond issues ("the BGNV bonds") issued by Bell Group NV (in insolvent liquidation in Curaçao (the place of the principal liquidation) and Australia (the place of the ancillary liquidation)), a Dutch Antilles Curaçao company. The BGNV bond issues (and also the BGF bond issue- see below) were guaranteed by the Bell Group's holding company, The Bell Group Ltd, ("TGBL") on a subordinated basis. TBGL's obligations under its subordinated guarantee rank equally with TBGL's other present and future subordinated indebtedness.
- There are two other bond issues, one issued by TBGL and one issued by Bell Group Finance Pty ("BGF"). Both TBGL and BGF are Australian companies in insolvent liquidation in Australia. The Insurance Commission of Western Australia ("ICWA") is the sole bondholder but not the sole beneficiary under the trust deeds. The senior creditors of TBGL and BGF including BGNV are also beneficiaries and they rank in priority to ICWA.
The structure of the Bell Group Financing Arrangements
Collapse of the Bell Group
"Power of Court to make orders in favour of certain creditors
Where in any winding up:
(a) property has been recovered under an indemnity for costs of litigation given by certain creditors, or has been protected or preserved by the payment of moneys or the giving of indemnity by creditors; or
(b) expenses in relation to which a creditor has indemnified a liquidator have been recovered;
the Court may make such orders, as it deems just with respect to the distribution of that property and the amount of those expenses so recovered with a view to giving those creditors an advantage over others in consideration of the risk assumed by them."
"there be liberty to apply to be released or to vary the undertakings if any amendment sought to be made… does not in any way adversely affect the rights, interests or position of [Senior Creditors of the Bell Group Ltd or Bell Group Finance Pty Ltd]"
Distribution issues
Clause 6(h) provides that (inter alios) TBGL and BGF (but excluding LDTC as BGNV trustee):
"…severally (and not jointly or jointly and severally) will take any and all steps reasonably necessary to facilitate [release of the undertakings in the Main Action]…"
And Clause 20(a)(vii) provides:
"Each party to this deed that is a current or former party to [the Other Action] (except for BGNV), will severally (and not jointly or jointly and severally) promptly take any and all steps reasonably necessary to facilitate the release of any current or former party to that proceeding from any undertaking given in the proceeding to the Supreme Court of Western Australia… "
Another relevant provision of the Deed of Settlement is the exclusive jurisdiction clause contained in Clause 33 (a) and (b), which subclauses are in the following form:
"GOVERNING LAW.
(a) This deed is governed by the laws of the State of Western Australia.
(b) Each party submits to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of that State and of any courts that may hear appeals from any of those courts, over any proceedings in connection with this deed."
(a) An application under s.564 filed on 4 August 2014 by the liquidators of TBGL and BGF (the liquidators of the principal Bell companies had previously applied for s. 564 relief on 7 April 1995 but that application had been dismissed on 13 November 1996 as premature);
(b) Two applications by ICWA filed on 17 September 2014 asking for resolution of matters including,
- Whether ICWA can benefit from an award under s.564 without Partial Desubordination and whether the subordination provisions in the TBGL and BGF trust deeds are an obstacle to receipt of such an award;
- Whether those trust deeds could be amended as envisaged in the Second Supplemental Deeds and
- Whether BGNV can challenge such amendments.
Plaza's current claim
- Facilitating the release of the undertakings given by LDTC in the Other Action;
- Facilitating the release of the undertakings given by TBGL, BGF and their liquidators in that action and in the Main Action;
- Supplying TBGL, BGF and their liquidators with either the Second Supplemental Deeds or deeds to similar effect for execution;
- Otherwise seeking to bring about Partial Desubordination.
CPR Part 11
Clause 33 (b)
"If, as appears to be generally accepted, there is no rational basis upon which businessmen would be likely to wish to have questions of the validity or enforceability of the contract decided by one tribunal and questions about its performance decided by another, one would need to find very clear language before deciding that they must have had such an intention."
The Brussels Regulation (sometimes called "the Judgment Regulation")
"Subject to this Regulation, persons domiciled in a Member State shall, whatever their nationality, be sued in the courts of that Member State."
LDTC is incorporated under English law and registered in England and is therefore domiciled in England under article 60 of the Brussels Regulation.
"the Brussels Convention precludes a court of a contracting state from declining the jurisdiction conferred on it by article 2 of that Convention on the ground that a court of a non-contracting state would be a more appropriate forum for the trial of the action, even if the jurisdiction of no other contracting state is in issue or the proceedings have no connecting factor to any other contracting state."
"If the parties, one or more of whom is domiciled in a Member State, have agreed that a court or the courts of a Member State are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which have arisen or which may arise in connection with a particular legal relationship, that court or those courts shall have jurisdiction."
And article 28(1) and (3) provides:
"Where related actions are pending in the courts of different Member States, any court other than the court first seised may stay its proceedings.
…
For the purposes of this article, actions are deemed to be related where they are so closely connected that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings."
"…this is required in order to give effect to the purpose (albeit not the letter) of the Regulation."
Article 23(1)
"The parties in [Owusu] were advancing arguments concerning forum non conveniens, not exclusive jurisdiction clauses. The court did not therefore have to consider what role an agreement between the parties might play, and compare the weight to be given to the agreement between the parties with the mandatory terms of art 2.
…My own view is that the terms of art 2 cannot deprive the parties of their autonomy in agreeing which court shall have the jurisdiction to determine their disputes." [He then cites Briggs and Rees's Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments (4th edn para 2.102 p.128, (also cited in the later 5th edition), mentions r 32 (2) in Dicey, Morris and Collins on the Conflict of Laws (14th edn 2006) Vol 1 p.513 and the obiter comments of Colman J in Konkola to the same effect and continues:]
"I therefore do not think that art 2…provide[s] a compelling reason for departing from the first choice made by the parties in the exclusive jurisdiction clause… Nor do I think that it constitutes an independent factor which in its own right militates against recognising the jurisdiction of the Guernsey court and the force of its order."
"…para 37 of the judgment in Owusu v. Jackson…is not to be understood to prevent the national court declining jurisdiction in all circumstances unless they are expressly recognised by the Brussels Regulation. A basic principle of the Regulation emphasised by the ECJ in Owusu itself is that a well-informed party should be able to predict where he might be sued and where he is entitled to sue, and it would not promote this principle to interpret the Regulation so as to defeat the parties' express agreement for exclusive jurisdiction, an agreement that is generally designed to achieve just such certainty….
Accordingly, the defendants submit, once it is recognised that the mandatory effect of article 2 of the Brussels Regulation is subject to the exception of an exclusive jurisdiction clause whereby the parties have chosen to resolve their disputes in the courts of a non-member state, there is no reason to interpret the judgment in Owusu v. Jackson as requiring the courts of member states to exercise jurisdiction over matters covered by article 22. There is support for this conclusion in Choudhary v. Bhatter [2009] EWCA Civ 1176, in which Sir John Chadwick said this (at para 52):
'…Properly understood, the decision in Owusu provides no direct authority on the question whether a court of a contracting state is precluded from declining the jurisdiction (if any) conferred on it by art 22 of the [Brussels] Regulation in respect of a person not domiciled in a member state on the ground that a court of a non-contracting state would be a more appropriate forum for the trial of the action.'"
"…article 23 provides that if the parties, one or more of whom are domiciled in a Regulation State have agreed that the courts of a Regulation State are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which may arise between them. What if they have designated the courts of a State which is not a Regulation State, such as the courts of New York and an action is brought in England in breach of the jurisdiction agreement? In such cases it would be odd if the [Brussels Regulation] did not permit the English court to stay its proceedings."
"The court or courts of a Member State on which a trust instrument has conferred jurisdiction shall have exclusive jurisdiction in any proceedings brought against a settlor, trustee or beneficiary, if relations between these persons or their rights or obligations under the trust are involved."
"…nothing in this Clause contained shall hinder or prevent the Trustee from taking proceedings in any other jurisdiction as the Trustee shall decide and from exercising all rights and powers under the laws for the time being in force in any such jurisdiction which it would have been entitled to take or exercise but for the inclusion of this Clause in these presents…"
And each of the Issuer (BGNV) and the Guarantor (TBGL):
"…hereby submits for all purposes of or in connection with these presents to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts… "
Article 28
"it is not open to me to interpret and apply article 27 reflexively so as to enable me to exercise a discretion to stay proceedings which have been properly founded on article 2, on the grounds that the same dispute is pending between the same parties in the Utah courts and that the latter and not this court is the natural and appropriate forum. Such an interpretation would introduce the wide forum conveniens discretion by the back door, contrary to the ruling of the ECJ in Owusu's case."
"I am inclined to agree…that the decision of the ECJ in Owusu has now removed discretionary considerations (such as those relating to forum non conveniens) from playing any part in the decision of a court in a Member State from staying its own proceedings. I am also inclined to agree that the court should not, under the guise of case management, achieve by the back door a result against which the ECJ has locked the front door."
"It is neither necessary nor desirable to extend the Owusu principle in cases where there are parallel proceedings in a non-member state."
"Accordingly in my judgment it is not appropriate to extend the reasoning in the Owusu case [2005] QB 801 to the very different circumstances of our case, which concerns a stay in favour of prior competing proceedings in a non member state (lis alibi pendens). I therefore agree with both the decision and the reasoning of Ms Lucy Theis QC, sitting as a deputy judge of the Family Division, in JKN v JCN (Divorce: Forum) [2011] 1 FLR 826, para 149(ii). It is not necessary for us to be drawn into a wider debate (which Ms Theis also considered) on the extent to which the Owusu case applies to the [Brussels Regulation]; and anything I might say on that topic would be simply obiter."
(i) To identify which set of proceedings were commenced first: at [75] per Lord Clarke (with whom Lord Sumption and Lord Hughes agreed) quoting with approval FKI Engineering Ltd v Striborg Ltd [2011] Bus LR 1410, at [119]–[120] per Rix LJ. However the proceedings must still be pending. If they have been finally concluded by way of dismissal or discontinuance they cannot be regarded as pending although a stay does not mean that the action does not remain pending: see [77]–[90] per Lord Clarke.
(ii) Secondly, the proceedings must be related to the current action, in the sense that they are, to quote article 28(3): "so closely connected that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings". The answer as to relatedness should be reached applying a "broad and commonsense approach…refraining from an over-sophisticated analysis of the matter": Sarrio SA v Kuwait Investment Authority [1999] 1 AC 32, at 41 per Lord Saville, cited with approval in The Alexandros at [88] per Lord Clarke.
"…it seems to me that it would be very odd indeed if a court which is seised of proceedings and stays those proceedings by way of a Tomlin order on the express terms that it retains jurisdiction to take further steps by way of implementation or policing of the order were prevented from exercising that jurisdiction, either by lifting the stay or otherwise, on the ground that it was no longer seised of the proceedings….to treat the enforcement action as something entirely new seems to me to be wrong."
"fundamentally a Western Australian affair: it is the further resolution of 20 year old Western Australian litigation and is the working out of the Western Australian liquidation of a Western Australian corporate group."
Article 5 (6)
"A person domiciled in a Member State may, in another Member State, be sued … as settlor, trustee or beneficiary of a trust created by the operation of a statute, or by a written instrument, or created orally and evidenced in writing, in the courts of the Member State in which the trust is domiciled."
Case management powers
"not only because the existence of concurrent proceedings may give rise to undesirable consequences in the form of inconsistent decisions, but also because the outcome of one set of proceedings may have an important effect on the conduct of the other."
Singularis Holdings Limited v. PricewaterhouseCoopers [2014] UKPC 36 ("Singularis")
"…wholly inconsistent with established principles governing the relationship between the judiciary and the legislature and therefore profoundly unconstitutional."
"whether a statutory rule may be taken into account in the exercise of a discretion".
Summary judgment/strike out
"be satisfied the all substantial relevant facts relevant to the allegations…which are reasonably capable of being before the court, are before the court; that these facts are undisputed or that there is no real prospect of oral evidence affecting the court's assessment of the facts."
"It is not unrealistic, as everyone experienced in litigation knows, for evidence … to take on a very different character after being subjected to cross-examination…Where the true facts lie is a matter that can only be determined when the full context is exposed at trial."
"In relation to the domestic bonds [i.e. the TBGL and BGF bond issues], LDTC exercised no independent trustee discretion when entering into the Deed of Settlement and was directed to do so by the sole bondholder, ICWA."
"there must be before the court, before it will entertain a quia timet action, satisfactory evidence that the defendant is threatening or intending to do that which it is said he is not entitled to do, or that which, it is said, will lead to serious damage to the plaintiff…for the grant of a quia timet injunction there must be an immediate threat to do something which requires the intervention of the court to prevent it."
Conclusion